Priests, or going down with the Titanic
Jeff Jarvis, paraphrasing Howard Owens in The real sin: Not running businesses
Like priests looking for someone to sacrifice, Alan Mutter, Steve Buttry, Howard Owens, and Steve Yelvington have been on the lookout for the sin that led newspapers astray. For Mutter, it’s not charging; for Buttry, it’s not innovating; for Owens, it’s tying online dingies to print Titanics (my poetic license); for Yelvington, it’s inaction.
Teenagers experimenting with sex
David Armano, paraphrased in the Charlotte Observer
Keynote speaker David Armano told a spillover crowd that businesses on social media today are like teenagers experimenting with sex: They don’t know what to do, but they really want to do it. Then they’re disappointed when they finally get to do it.
Original Sin
Alan Mutter’s Mission possible? Charging for web content (with bonus TV Show title joke cliche)
It is going to be just as tough for publishers to overcome their Original Sin as it has been for mankind to get past the original Original Sin committed when Adam and Eve partook of the forbidden fruit.
Steve Buttry’s Newspapers’ Original Sin: Not failing to charge but failing to innovate
Mutter is right that newspapers are still paying for an Original Sin committed in the early days of the Internet, but he (along with the AP story and lots of newspaper executives today) chose the wrong sin.
Howard Owens’ The Newspaper Original Sin: Keeping online units tethered to the mother ship (with bonus spaceship metaphor giving it a Scientology quality)
The Original Sin was? Failure to create separate business units for online.
Steve Yellvington’s Original sin? I don’t think so, but ….
Having been on more than one side of that question, and having been one of the originals, I categorically reject the notion of any “original sin.”
Unless, of course, you think inaction is a sin.