With the government relaxing the FDI norms for leisure and general interest print publications, among the international publishers to take advantage of this is BBC Worldwide through its subsidiary BBC Magazines.
The Times Group and BBC Magazines have announced the signing of a formal agreement to set up a 50:50 joint venture company to publish magazines in India. One of the aims is to cater to the upper middle class that is getting increasingly interested in niche products.
Indiantelevision.com's Ashwin Pinto caught up with BBC Magazines MD Peter Phippens recently to get his take on the potential of the business.
Phippens was appointed MD in July 2001. Previously he was the president and CEO of BBC Worldwide Americas, a position he took up in August 1998. He began his career in 1982 as a graduate trainee at IPC. In 1987 he joined BBC Magazines as marketing director where he marketed existing magazines and oversaw the launch of new titles.
During the conversation, Phippens dwelt on the services of BBC Magazines, the synergies it is looking at through the joint venture, as well as the role and relevance of magazines in today’s converging world.
Could you provide an overview of BBC Magazines and the services it offers? Then there is the Good Food Magazine, which is the largest food title in the UK. We have big titles in the women’s segment including Eve. It is the fastest growing women’s monthly in the UK. We are also the largest publisher of children’s magazines and are doing well in the teen sector too. Some of these may be relevant to India as well. |
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Could you talk about the common synergies that you are looking to explore with Bennett Coleman? |
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How does a conservative institution like the BBC view Bombay Times, which devotes a great deal of attention to the Page Three phenomenon? |
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Do you see scope for content improvement and more professionalism in Bombay Times, Femina andFilmfare? On the contrary, our interest in the joint venture is that the existing magazines are already very strong and we don’t want to do anything to change that. |
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Which publications are you planning to introduce in India and will the content be tailored in any manner to suit local tastes? For magazines to be successful, they have to be developed fittingly to the marketplace by people who possess a thorough understanding of that particular market. We may borrow ideas from our magazines in the UK or introduce a small amount of content. Essentially though we will be developing magazines in India from scratch. |
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Will you be making editorial appointments in India? |
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Would you also be looking at forming tie-ups with regional language publications? |
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I would appreciate your impressions on the print media scene in India given the growth of television. Despite all of that, the magazine sector remains very important in America. That is because the magazine medium does something that the other media do less successfully. Magazines speak personally to people. In my opinion, they reflect people’s aspirations and their passions better than any other medium. New media create a reappraisal of the pre-existing media but they do not normally undermine it. Even in the electronic media if you go back to the invention of television, people initially felt that the radio would become obsolete. Of course radio has thrived over the decades. There are things that you can do on radio like letting your imagination run wild in a way that is not possible on television. The same logic applies to magazines. |
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How is the BBC’s entry going to change things in the print medium? However it may be that our two business concerns working together will help the Indian magazine sector develop more quickly than it would have done anyway |
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How has BBC magazines grown the business in the past couple of years? We have managed year on year increases for titles ranging from Radio Times to Girl Talk and Eve to Top Of The Pops. We also partly grow through acquisitions. A couple of months ago in the UK we acquired Origin Publishing. It publishes 12 quality specialist consumer magazines such as Focus and Living History. This provides us with a platform from which we can plan future launches in specialist markets. |
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What value additions does Top Gear provide for fans of the television show? Last year we gave it a new more contemporary page format and a completely redesigned data section. |
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What is the USP that BBC Magazines offers the reader vis-?-vis the competition? |
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In the near future are you also looking adding the young male genre to add to your stable? |
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With the advent of the Internet what are the major changes that have happened in your publishing business? Both media are very good at creating communities. Magazines by the nature are about sharing ideas and information among a community of readers who have been brought together by a single passion be it golf, food or cars. The internet can also do the same. |
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Why won’t online editions of magazines work? A few years ago when the Internet was in its infancy, there was a tendency for people to try and do on the Internet what they were already doing in print. Some people were simply reproducing a carbon copy of their magazine on the Internet. That is not going to drive new revenues. Of course there are interpretations of what an Internet magazine might be. With convergence coming in do you see growing synergies between different forms of media? Television is fantastic for entertainment and mass communication. It is great for mobilising people. But it fails in the area of speaking personally to people, which as I pointed out earlier is something that magazines are very good at. Magazines are also particularly strong at creating a bond of trust with the reader. Besides India, which are the other countries being looked at to grow the business? Do you do a lot of marketing and promotional activities to create awareness about your products? Was the ad revenue hit last year on account of the depressed economic climate? There are very early signs of that. I don't think the growth next year will be registering a rapid increase. I think, it will be more in the nature of a gradual upturn rather than a sudden explosion. |