Sunday, May 31, 2009

(ANOTHER) NEW MAGAZINE IN THAILAND

Computer Arts Thailand is the latest magazine in launch in Thailand. I've seen at least half a dozen in the last six weeks, although what makes this one different is that it's licensed from UK publisher Future Plc.
The debut edition runs to 142 pages and contains a substantial proportion of material that has been translated into Thai from the original English edition. The 150 baht cover price is high for a sector that already boasts a number of graphic design and computer design related magazines.
Advertising is poor, even for a first edition, at just four pages which indicates the problems that any publisher bringing a new title to the Thai market is faced with.

Whether the time is right for this kind of magazine in this sector remains to be seen. For the publishers, Post Elements Co. Ltd, it would appear to be their first venture into publishing and away from their animation and design business.

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FRONT PAGE NEWS: SUN MAY 31

The Nation on Sunday leads with a third H1N1 infection in Thailand, although the 51-year-old woman has already recovered. The Bangkok Post leads with comments from Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva aimed as his parliament colleagues to avoid conflict and corruption.

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Saturday, May 30, 2009

FRONT PAGE NEWS: SAT MAY 30

The Nation leads with hopes that the newly born panda cub will give a much needed boost to tourism in the northern city of Chiang Mai. The Bangkok Post discusses fears of a Government rift over an air force procurement contract.

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Friday, May 29, 2009

THAI LAUNCHES GLOBAL AD CAMPAIGN

Thai Airways International has launched a global television and print advertising campaign this week entitled 'Blooming Thailand: No one brings you closer to the heart of Thailand than Thai."
Using the Kingdom's famous tourist attractions - a floating market, a night market and a beach spa - the television ad follows groups of travelers as they encounter the generosity of the Thai people during their visit.
Thai still remains a substantially more expensive option on all the routes I have looked at myself recently, and I personally think that no amount of advertising will compensate for that pricing differential when most travelers want to pay as little as possible.

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FRONT PAGE NEWS; FRI MAY 29

The Nation leads with a story concerning the controversial Government rice sale policy which could see losses of 20 billion baht. The Bangkok Post reports coalition MPs are rallying behind the Prime Minister's decision to oppose at 67 billion baht bus leasing project. Daily Xpress leads with the news of the birth on Wednesday of a female panda cub at a zoo in Chiang Mai.

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

THE NATION ADMITS CAUSING "BIG DAMAGE"

A small 'ad' style apology appears on page 4A of The Nation today.
It reads: "Referring to a news report of The Nation, May 11, 2009 edition that the Emerald Hotel is being put on sale for Bt 3.5 billion, which has caused big damage to the hotel image. We at The Nation would like to announce that such news report was in error. We would like to apologise the Emerald Hotel for this mistake." (This is a word-for-word reproduction and appears not to have been English edited).
The original story was the front page lead on May 11 headlined "Scores of Hotels on Block". It included a graphic with reference to Emerald Hotel, and others in Thailand, being for sale as a result of the Kingdom's tourism slump. The story itself did not contain specific quotes about this hotel but said it was "reportedly on the market".
The apology is not yet appearing online but, amazingly (or perhaps not), the original story complete with the error remains intact and unaltered.
I am a firm believer in correcting published mistakes. My magazine issues corrections and clarifications when we get something wrong, which thankfully is not too often. In this case, and if I was the damaged company, I would be demanding equal prominence for the apology on the front page to match that which the original story received, requesting the original story be amended online and the apology appearing online too.

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PUBLISHERS SHOULD LEARN FROM MONKEY

Print is dying, or so you would think from reading about the ever increasing number of newspapers and magazines that are ceasing operations around the world. In Thailand print is still alive although facing increasing competition from online news and entertainment sources.
Page-flipping online magazines could be the way forward. Using the traditional and much-loved magazine format they also contain a wealth of rich media that’s limited only by the imagination of the designer.
In Thailand Dom Chotivanich is taking online magazines to the next level. The former editor-in-chief of Maxim Thailand launched a licensed Thai version of the spectacularly popular Monkey in October of last year, and speaking recently to The Bangkok Bugle he explained that Monkey is just the beginning.
He said: “It started from my company, NetPublications in Denmark, when we licensed the Ceros digital magazine platform. Dennis Publishing in the UK has partnerships with them; they’re publishers of digital magazines Monkey, iGizmo and iMotor. We got the licenses to produce all three in Thailand. I started with Monkey because it was an easy way to introduce Thai people to online magazines. iGizmo and iMotor will follow this year.”
Dom launched Monkey in Thailand in October 2008, and reports are that the free magazine now has 11,000 subscribers. But he admitted the relative slow speed of the Internet is a problem.
“People were really amazed and really liked it but they found it a bit slow to load on our pathetic Thailand Internet. We started out with Monkey’s UK design and content structure which use lots of video contents. Later we found from the back-end stats that Thai readers did not get into the video content that much. With that in mind I redesigned our Monkey in December with more text, photos and flash content to make it more magazine-like and reader-friendly. Now I think we’re in a good position and ready to go further.”
With the magazine’s free business model the revenues must come largely from advertising, and initially that was a problem as Dom explained.
“Digital magazines are very new in Thailand, not only to readers but to advertisers. They want to wait and see, they want to watch us grow and it’s my duty to make that happen. One beautiful part of this business is that it doesn’t cost much to do produce one edition, especially when compared to print magazines. The costs are low, and even though we have not earned so much from advertising it’s still enough to keep us alive.”
He added that Monkey has been a showcase for his company, and he has been attracting clients that want him to produce similar magazines for their organizations.
Many print magazines would give anything for 11,000 subscribers right now, but as Dom acknowledged there are significant advantages and disadvantages. On the one hand they’re cheap to produce yet the revenues, at least for now, are small because advertisers are yet to really see the benefits. That will happen, and when it does Dom and his company will be well placed to take full advantage.

Links:
Monkey Thailand.
Monkey UK.
Guardian story about Dennis Publishing/Monkey/iGizmo.

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FRONT PAGE NEWS: THUR MAY 28

The Bangkok Post leads with news the Democrat and Bhumjaithai political parties have set aside differences in a bid to resolve the ongoing farm crop issue. The Nation's headline is about Israel's largest real estate developer announcing an 18 billion baht joint venture project close to Chong Nonsi skytrain station. Daily Xpress focuses on a global Internet campaign to put pressure on Burma's ruling junta to release Aung San Suu Kyi.

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

ALCOHOL ADS; NEW LAWS APPROVED

New laws relating to alcohol advertising in Thailand have been approved in principal by the Thai Government. For the print media industry there are some important restrictions.
The law that is likely to have most impact is that any advertising for alcohol cannot appear on front pages, back pages, centerfolds and wraparounds. A significant number of magazines would currently be in breach of that law if it were in effect now.
Logos for alcohol products must not exceed 5 per cent of the total space of any print advertisement, and ads should not present any properties of the drink and in any way encourage consumers to drink them.
There's no indication when these regulations are likely to become law.

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FRONT PAGE NEWS: WED MAY 27

The Nation leads with the Prime Minister's decision to put a controversial sale of Government rice on hold. The Bangkok Post, on the same story, leads with the appoinment of Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban to head a committee to resolve the issue. Daily Xpress headlines the growing number of Thai-Japanese children who are wanting to contact their long-lost fathers.

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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

FRONT PAGE NEWS: TUE MAY 26

The Bangkok Post leads with a denial by Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya of charges by the Burmese junta of interfering in its affairs. The Nation leads with the news that Thailand's economy contracted 7.1 per cent during the first quarter of 2009. Daily Xpress leads with news of a Thai graduate's success in the Best Student Short Film at the Cannes Film Festival.

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Monday, May 25, 2009

THAI MAGAZINE DISTRIBUTION IN ACTION


Here is a picture showing one kerbside magazine distribution business in Thailand in action.
When you look at this you can see why it's pretty near impossible for any kind of circulation auditing to happen. Imagine asking these guys to keep track of delivery and returns notes.

For most publishers the distribution process works - albeit not as smoothly as most would like.

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FRONT PAGE NEWS: MON MAY 25

The Bangkok Post: "PAD comes to the party". A story about members of the People's Alliance for Democracy poised for form a new political party.
The Nation: "Coalition falls apart". A story suggesting Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva may be forced to run a minority government if the coalition split intensifies.
Daily Xpress: "Global romaing". A Japanese man pays a second visit to Thailand on his 11-year, 125 country journey.

Note: This is a new feature for Bangkok Bugle. Each day I will summarise the lead stories in each of the three English language daily newspapers.

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Thursday, May 21, 2009

MAGS LAUNCHING DESPITE 'MELTDOWN'

Despite the global economic situation and what some are calling a "meltdown" in the print publishing industry, there are still magazines making their debut on the shelves in Thailand.
The latest, and one of two I've seen this week, is
Biz which is dubbed "interactive English for business". This magazine appears to be a business-focused spin-off from an existing magazine produced by publishers DID International.
The debut issue is priced at 99 baht and includes a DVD, MP3 and VCD. Advertising is practically non existent in the 82-page issue so all the revenues will have to come from copy sales. Any publisher knows that's difficult right now.

I've looked at the business English sector myself and it did seem an exploitable area for magazine publishers. One concern was lack of potential advertising revenue and that's been highlighted by this first edition of
Biz.

Note: Although the cover price is 99 baht the B2S shop where I got my copy had priced it at 79 baht. I wonder whether the publisher will get their full share of income from what looks like an error?

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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

SAME STORY; VASTLY DIFFERENT FIGURES

The Nation published two online stories yesterday regarding factory closures and unemployment data in Thailand during the first four months of 2009.
What appears to be the first version, here, paints a gloomy picture with "about 50,000 workers" losing their jobs and 400 factories closed. In the second version, here, says "29,327 workers have been laid off" and 305 factories closed. Both reports quote data from a report and cite the Permanent Secretary for Labour. Because these reports are not timestamped it's unclear how much time elapsed between them.
Perhaps the figures in the first report were a simple mathematical error? If so, reporters need to understand how damaging data like this can potentially be to the markets. Just look at what happens in New York when bad jobs data is released.
Thanks to Gareth for spotting this.

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Tuesday, May 19, 2009

LIVERPOOL IN BANGKOK: TICKET DETAILS

Tickets for Liverpool Football Club's match in Bangkok on July 22 will go on sale on Friday May 22, with prices ranging from 600 baht to 3,000 baht.
Executives from tour organizers and Liverpool announced the details at a press conference in the Thai capital on Tuesday afternoon. The game will take place at Rajamangala Stadium with a 48,000 capacity. Around a quarter of the total number of tickets will be available at 600 baht, and executives from tour organisers Strategic Sports Investment revealed more than half have already been allocated to regional supporters clubs.
Tickets in Thailand will be available solely though Adidas shops in Bangkok, Phuket and Pattaya. Most of the stadium will operate a 'free seating' policy, tickets will be sold on a first come, first served basis and limited to four tickets per person. A ticket hot line - 0-2653-2201 will also operate.

UPDATE: July 6 - Tickets for the Thailand versus Liverpool match in Bangkok look set to be a sell out. See my updated post HERE.

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Monday, May 18, 2009

NATION'S LATEST SUNDAY OFFERING

The 'new look" The Nation on Sunday made its debut yesterday.
Ace magazine is gone, having lasted barely six months and failing to attract significant advertising. The publishers say that Ace's content has been incorporated into the new 'Leisure' second section, but sadly what worked in an A4 glossy magazine just does not work in The Nation's broadsheet format. It's the fourth time in little over a year the published has played with its Sunday publishing model.

Apart from the 'bond paper' wrapping to both sections what's most noticeable about this latest offering is it's size - just 24 pages in two wafer-thin sections. To me this would appear to be a plan to continue publishing something on a Sunday (and hence retain the tag of being a daily newspaper) at minimum cost.

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BACK AND WHITE AND RED ALL OVER

So Thailand will get another newspaper later this month. The United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship, (red shirts) announced last week its intention to start producing a 18-24 page, five-days-a-week tabloid with a 50,000 copy print run.
Whilst obviously a politically motivated move it's going to take someone with deep pockets to keep this kind of venture alive. The Manager Group, with its own newspapers and magazines, lost a lot of advertising revenues from its association that the yellow shirts. I cannot see how it will be any different for a red-backed newspaper.
At least it shown one thing; the print media is still being seen as essential for getting a message across in Thailand.

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Saturday, May 16, 2009

POST POSTS 22 MILLION LOSS IN Q1

The Post Publishing Public Company Limited has posted a 22 million baht loss for the first three months of 2009, according to information released to the Stock Exchange of Thailand yesterday evening. The same period last year saw a 6.1 million baht loss.
The statement reads: "The global economic crisis and local political uncertainties have led to a substantial decline in advertising spending, and thus a sharp drop of our revenue, while high costs of newsprint still carried over from last year. Sales and service income dropped from 373.8 to 345.2 million baht. Costs of sales and services increased from 255.0 to 275.2 million baht. Gross profit therefore weakened substantially from 119.0 to 70.0 million baht."
"Although we managed to reduce selling and administrative expenses including management's remuneration from 128.0 million baht to 95.6 million baht, it was not enough to compensate for the very weak gross profit."
So costs are up and income is down. The same is true in many Thai companies right now, but not many could afford to be losing what amounts to 250,000 baht per day (in the case of Post Publishing) or 600,000 baht per day (in the case of Nation Multimedia Group).

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Friday, May 15, 2009

BID TO HALT NEWSPAPER GALLERY OF GORE

A group of Thai academics is petitioning leading Thai newspaper publishers to halt their almost daily use of graphic images on front pages.
Earlier this year I
blogged about this, and how the top-selling newspapers including market-leading Thai Rath doesn't hold back when it comes to publishing images of car crashes.
Yubol Benjarongkij, dean of the communication arts department at Chulalongkorn University said: "I won’t say we’ll be successful, the publishers think these picture make big sales. It’s hard to change that belief."
She's right. It will be hard to convince publishers to change what appears to be a successful model. I always remember the "If it bleeds, it leads" anecdote from my time in the U.K. Bad news and crime on the front page generally means good sales for any publication.

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REDS IN BANGKOK, BUT AT WHAT COST?

The Red Army, the sporting variety and not the political one, will descend on South East Asia in July when Liverpool Football Club plays matches in Bangkok and Singapore.
Ticketing details are set to be announced at a press conference next Tuesday. The tour is being organized by Strategic Sports Investment, part of The Profitable Group. That name alone will tell you this tour will have to make money.
Last month the Hong Kong Football Association rejected Liverpool's financial demands to play in a tournament there. The English club was reportedly asking for a US$ 1.5 million appearance fee, exclusive television rights and half the advertising revenues, as well as air fares and hotel accommodation.
Ticket prices for football matches in Bangkok are cheap. Prices for games involving the Thailand national team start as low as 100 baht (US$ 3) and even matches involving foreign clubs attract prices of around 800 baht for the best tickets. But I think this tour will be different, and I would not be surprised to see prices much, much higher.
This tour, as I said, is being run by an investment fund and they'll be looking to make as much money as possible. I genuinely think we might see prices starting at the US$ 15 for a seat in the gods, rising to anything up to US$100 for front row seats. I think there would be enough people willing to pay that sort of money, even in the current economic climate, to sell out the 55,000 capacity Rajamangala Stadium in July 22.

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

THE RAIN IS COMING

This was the view from the balcony of my condo last Sunday afternoon of an approaching storm. It really was that dark and I had visions of the end of the world.
Each morning this week has involved a damp and overcast commute to the office. From the air-conditioned bubble of my taxi it seems just like an Autumnal morning back in the UK, but that changes when I step outside into the heat and humidity. More often that not my glasses have steamed up!

Bangkok is now heading into the rainy season. It's cooled down a little from a few weeks back, and for the next few months we're likely to have some impressive storms. Watch out for pictures, hopefully.

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

EDITOR WANTED FOR PROPERTY MAGAZINE

Property Report Thailand is looking for an experienced native English Editor. Check out my Thailand Journalism Jobs website for more information.

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BANGKOK READERS ARE MISSING OUT

Fans of English language magazines in Bangkok are missing out on copies of recently launched publications, as my recent trip to Singapore highlighted.
The three magazines pictured here have all launched with the last few months, all are in English yet none are available from any bookshops in Thailand.

From left to right there is
Jamie (May is the third edition of this magazine devoted to fans of Jamie Oliver), CNC (dubbed 'The Geographical Magazine on China' which has launched this month) and Lonely Planet (April was the fourth edition of this global travel brand spin-off).
Singapore has the largest English language readership in Asia so I can understand why distributors and publishes would send magazines there in preference to places like Bangkok. But it does seem that very few (if any) newly launched overseas publications make it to the shelves in Thailand.

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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

NATION GROUP: 58 MB LOSS IN Q1

Nation Multimedia Group Public Company Limited recorded an operating loss of 58.89 million baht during the first quarter of 2009, according to a statement released to the Stock Exchange of Thailand yesterday evening.
Advertising revenues were down 27 per cent overall compared to the same period last year, with revenues from print advertising recording a 35 per cent drop. Revenues from circulation were down 19 per cent with newspapers showing a 13 per cent decline, and pocket books and comic books recording a 22 per cent fall. Revenues from the international magazine distribution and logistics business recorded a 17 per cent decline.
During the first quarter of 2008 the company recorded a net profit of 6.94 million baht.

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AD SPEND DOWN, MAGAZINES HIT HARD

Figures from research group AC Nielsen released yesterday showed advertising spending was down during the first four months of 2009 - with the magazine sector hardest hit.
Spending on magazines was down 14.7%, with newspapers and radio both suffering 12.7% declines. Overall, ad spending is expected to show a 3.5% contraction during the first six months according to Group M (Thailand), one of the country's top media buying agencies.

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BANGKOK TO GET IKEA STORE, AT LAST

The Bangkok Post reports today that Thailand will get its first IKEA store, with the opening scheduled for October 2011. The 40,000 sq. meter store will be built at Bang Na Trat Km 9 at what will be known as the Mega Bang Na Complex.
Posts about IKEA have been consistently popular on this blog, and in March I blogged that plans had been put on hold amid the global financial crisis. Obviously someone has found some money from somewhere.
I am a big fan of IKEA (as you might have gathered) and spent a couple of hours at the Singapore store just nine days ago. The news that Bangkok will get its own store is really pleasing.

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Monday, May 11, 2009

CHANGES TO THE NATION; ACE DROPPED

Readers of The Nation will notice a few changes to their newspaper this morning.
The most obvious change is that the newspaper's two sections are now 'wrapped' in a whiter, thicker outer four pages. The rest of the paper is printed on the same, lower quality paper.
Another change is in the price; a 20 per cent increase from 25 baht to 30 baht. Ace magazine, the glossy Sunday supplement, also appears to have died.
In a note on its front page headlined: "The Nation adds premium paper to reading experience" explains: ".. the cover price will be adjusted .. to reflect the hike in newsprint prices, which we had been absorbing since late last year." It also explains: "The contents of The Nation on Sunday magazine Ace will be transferred to the main newspaper ..". It justifies the change in paper by saying it wants to: ".. distinguish itself as the largest English language business daily in Thailand."
Correct me if I am wrong but newsprint prices have been declining in recent months so the "price hike" explanation does not make sense. And unless I've missed something The Nation is the ONLY English language business daily in Thailand.

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Sunday, May 10, 2009

WHY PAID NEWS SITES WILL NOT WORK

Media mogul Rupert Murdoch admitted last week that his News Corporation expects to be charging for access to its newspaper websites by the end of the year.
My question to you is: do you expect to be paying for access to your news on the web within the next six months ?
While sites like The Wall Street Journal are making good money from online subscriptions you have to remember that content is niche. The moment one newspaper starts to enforce charges for its online readers will move elsewhere,along with advertising revenues.
What I think is inevitable is that any news published behind a pay wall is likely to be reposted pretty quickly, so publishers will need to increase their efforts on the copyright enforcement front.
Newspapers and magazines are facing tough times but my view is that introducing widespread payment for website news is not the way forward.
What do you think?

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Friday, May 08, 2009

GOVERNMENT REPLY TO ECONOMIST STORY

The Bangkok Post carries a letter today from Thailand's Director General, Dept. of Information, at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The letter is a response to an opinion piece in the April 16 edition of The Economist entitled "The trouble with the King" and is almost identical to that which appeared in The Economist last week.
That April 16 print edition of The Economist was not distributed in Thailand by the publishers because of the "sensitive" nature of coverage of the monarchy. Obviously not so sensitive as to be worthy of an official Government response now.

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Thursday, May 07, 2009

THAILAND MAGS IN SINGAPORE

My trip to Singapore last weekend gave me an opportunity to study the Thailand-based magazines that distribute outside the Kingdom. Many claim to have pan-Asian circulation however I only saw four magazines on sale at the two main Singapore bookshops, Borders and Kinokuniya.
The four magazines, all of which are English, were Tropical Living in Thailand, DestinAsia, Tropical and Lifestyle + Travel. I didn't see a single Thai language magazine on sale, however there was one rather forlorn and dogeared copy of the previous days The Bangkok Post, minus its inserts but for sale at three times the cover price.

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Tuesday, May 05, 2009

NEW MAGAZINE WITH A 'SPECIAL' PROBLEM

Hotel Gateway is the latest magazine to debut in Thailand - but the first edition of this bilingual, bi-monthly magazine has a rather special problem.
Many Thai language magazines use a fair amount of English language on covers and in headlines, not always correctly.
Hotel Gateway has a spelling error - 'specail' instead of 'special' - on its inaugural front cover. To me that's unforgivable, especially when they have an English proofreader listed in the team. In other parts of the world I've seen whole issues of magazines pulped for similar errors.
Anyway,
Hotel Gateway does have a fair amount of advertising for a debut issue. It runs to 98 pages and retails for 80 baht. It is published by Bangkok-based The Book Lover Co. Limited.

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Monday, May 04, 2009

BBC ENTERTAINMENT DROPPED BY TRUE

Thailand's True Vision cable television provider has confirmed it will be dropping the popular BBC Entertainment channel from its programming later this month.
But for fans of reruns and repeats of popular British televisions shows all might not be lost. The company has apparently been swamped by irate subscribers threatening to cancel their 2,000 baht per month subscriptions when the channel is replaced by AXN Beyond.
I am one of those irate subscribers. BBC Entertainment is one of the few channels I actually watch. In an email reply a representative from True Vision explained the reasons for the change were down to contract expiry issues and was not cost related.
Posts on one popular Thai forum are suggesting those who also feel upset with this change should email truevisions_care@truevisionstv.com to express their discontent. It's worth a try.

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NATION STILL PRINTING SUNDAY EDITION

In early March I blogged about a comment on the 2Bangkok.com website suggesting The Nation was to cease printing its Sunday edition during April. I'm happy to report that as of yesterday (May 3) the newspaper is still producing a Sunday edition.

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RECORD MONTH FOR THE BANGKOK BUGLE

The Bangkok Bugle celebrates its third birthday this week and continues to attract growing numbers of visitors from around the world.
Last month was a record month. Unique visitors were up 110 per cent on the previous month, and page views also saw a 95 per cent increase as the world searched for information about events in Bangkok and Thailand. The top five most-read posts were all written during April 2009.
Did other Thailand-based bloggers also see similar increased activity last month? I'd be really interested to hear.

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MAGAZINE WORLD MEETS IN LONDON

The bi-annual World Magazine Congress gets underway in London today, with many of the magazine world's leading figures expected to attend.
It's certainly not all doom and gloom in the industry, and many of the planned seminars during the three days will focus on how magazine publishers and their products are thriving.
Sadly I will not be there but two or three Thailand-based magazine publishers are expected to attend. That's two or three from the hundreds out there. One reason for the low turn-out could be cost. The event costs close to 80,000 baht to attend, and when you add flights and hotels it's not a cheap event to attend.
I am focusing my efforts (and budget) on the World Magazine Marketplace event which takes place in Dubai later this year.

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Saturday, May 02, 2009

97,000 READERS, BUT MAG STILL CLOSES

Readers are the key to a successful magazine, but it seems that even with close to 100,000 readers some magazines simply cannot survive.
BBC Good Homes magazine in the UK is the latest to announce it will cease printing. Its latest audit shows a circulation of more than 97,000 copies were sold including more than 23,000 subscribers.
I picked up a copy of the 12-year-old magazine recently for 20 baht from Chatuchak market and I thought it was a nicely produced title, but its demise is symptomatic of what's happening globally and also probably gives an indication of what's happening in the UK property sector as well.

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SINGAPORE: SO MANY MAGAZINES

I feel like a kid in a candy store.
I am in Singapore for a couple of days and spent some time (and far too much money) in its two largest bookstores - Kinokuniya and Borders - yesterday evening. By way of comparison the Orchard Road branch of Kinokuniya is about four or five times the size of the one in Siam Paragon, and offers about four or five times the number of English language magazines.
There are titles from the United Kingdom, United States and Australia that simply never make it to Bangkok. Obviously the market here for English is far bigger than that in Thailand, but it seems there are loads of locally produced magazines in almost every category. I wonder how they survive?

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