Jan. 5, 2007
PARALLEL UNIVERSE: ‘Small Street Journal’ Redesign of Venerable Wall
Street Journal Works for Me, Other Critics
By David M. Kinchen
Editor, Huntington News Network
Hinton, WV (HNN) – When The Wall Street Journal announced its redesign
last
year – including a reduction in the web size to match that of most
other
broadsheet newspapers – it acquired the instant moniker “The Small
Street
Journal.”
Other smart-aleck phrases describing the remake included: “Now, the
complete
skinny,” “We reduced. You deride,” and “All the news that’s fi to
print,”
according to Jonah Bloom, writing in the Jan. 3, 2007 Advertising Age.
Bloom points out that these slogans “… were Slate readers' slogan
suggestions for the new-look Wall Street Journal; you can find them at
the
end of Jack Shafer's piece on the topic [here’s a link:
http://www.slate.com/id/2154880]. “Referring to the Journal's 3-inch
downsizing, Shafer opens by noting that, ‘It's the rare amputee who
describes himself as better off without his two big toes than with
them.’ He
goes on to decide that the Journal's redesign is part of a greater Dow
Jones
‘retreat.’ In other words, in Shafer's view, the redesign is about cost
cutting.”
Katherine Q. Seelye, writing in The New York Times, said the changes
were
“primarily driven by economics,” including $18 million worth of
savings in
newsprint and distribution costs.
All in all, Bloom likes the new look WSJ, which debuted Tuesday, Jan.
2,
2007: “… overall, it's a more comfortable, better-illustrated read,
with
jumps that are easier to follow. It's a read that accepts that not all
of us
have two hours to thumb through the pages. And, most importantly for
advertisers, it's still the Journal, which translates roughly as
‘a-must-read-for-anyone-in-business,’ delivering a couple of million
walking
wallets every day. Surely that fact, along with this smart redesign,
will
make the Journal a properly profitable business in '07. If it doesn't,
then
I don't hold out much hope for any of us in the business of business
news.”
Bloom goes on to cite other critics who like the redesign, including
Jon
Fine, a former colleague at Ad Age, now writing for BusinessWeek;
Jonathan
Berr at Blogging Stocks and Keith Ferrell at the TechWebblog.
This month marks the 41st anniversary of my entry into the wonderful
world
of journalism; Since that momentous day in January 1966 when I walked
into
the lobby of the Hammond (Ind.) Times, I’ve worked for five daily
newspapers
in four states, including more than 14 years at one of the biggest –
the Los
Angeles Times – so I have some perspective about the changing face of
newspaper design.
I like the policy of fewer jumps – newsroom lingo for continuing a
story to
another page. Jumps now follow a pattern that makes more sense than in
the
old design, asserts managing editor Paul E. Steiger, whose tenure at
the Los
Angeles Times overlapped mine.
The Jan. 2, 2007 issue included a reader’s guide to the new paper –
something I hope the paper will include in each issue for a week or so.
It
wouldn’t be a bad idea to put aside a copy of this reader’s guide for
future
reference. I’m doing that…just have to remember which of 10,000 drawers
it’s
in!
When USA Today appeared in 1982, I thought Gannett made the right
decision.
It was a smart move, emulating TV in all its vivid color in a national
newspaper. Along with The Wall Street Journal, USA Today is one of the
few
major newspapers either holding onto its circulation or gaining. The
Wall
Street Journal has more than 2 million circulation, while USA Today
leads
the nation with more than 2.3 million, according to the World Almanac.
Both
papers must be doing something right at a time when prestigious papers
are
losing circulation, including but not limited to the Los Angeles Times
and
the flagship of its owner, the Chicago Tribune.
Design has certainly played a role in the success of what was once
derided
as “McPaper,” but giving the public outstanding sports coverage, a
weather
page that’s unexcelled and short takes on the news have played an even
more
important role, in my opinion. Don’t give the people what they want,
“give
them more,” stated legendary showman Samuel Lionel "Roxy" Rothafel
(1882-1936). It’s great advice.
Getting back to The Wall Street Journal: The paper is 6 inches narrower
– 24
inches compared to 30 inches -- when opened to full double-truck
position
than the last issue of 2006. The approximate 23-inch length is the same
as
the old design. If you’re reading the paper on public transportation,
on a
train or plane, you’re less likely to cause severe eye damage to your
seatmates. It’s only a foot wide in the single page position, about an
inch
wider than a tabloid. I call this format a “broadsheet tabloid” because
it
combines features of traditional broadsheets with the ease of handling
common to tabloids.
Where the previous paper had six columns on a typical page, the new one
has
five narrower ones on some pages, with six narrower ones on others. As
an
editor who has designed pages for both broadsheet newspapers and
tabloid
special sections, I believe the variation in the number of columns
shouldn’t
confuse most readers. If it does, they’ll get used to it!
For more on the changes – which I believe improve an already
outstanding
newspaper, the paper I turn to for news and comment because I trust it
–
click on:
http://www.dowjones.com/Pressroom/PressReleases/Other/US/2006/1204_US_TheWallStreetJournal_1565.htm.
As a long-time fan of The Wall Street Journal, I applaud the changes.
Of
course the narrower web will save Dow Jones & Co. money on newsprint,
but
the big step forward is user convenience. It’s a far more usable
newspaper
than the wide-web version. That’s what counts in a world where the
print
edition competes with online news sites. And yes, the period is still
there
in the nameplate, just as it was in the first issue of the paper in
1889.
Some things should never change!