1st Edition

Innovations in Magazine Publishing

Edited By Simon Das, David Stam, Andrew Blake Copyright 2021
202 Pages 31 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

202 Pages 31 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

202 Pages 31 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book examines the key developments in the UK magazine industry since 2014 and explains in detail how the business has innovated to survive. Innovations in Magazine Publishing  explores the key issues that publishers and editors have had to grapple with in recent years and demonstrates how they have changed their business models and encouraged innovation and creativity. Written in an... Read more

Editors and Contributors

Preface

Acknowledgements

Introduction

1. Magazine publishing innovation: The ‘drivers’ and implications of technology - Simon Das

2. A short history of British consumer magazine publishing - Christine Stam

3. UK magazine publishing: Innovation as necessity - David Stam

4. Managing innovation: The three ‘Ps’ of creativity and commercialisation - Simon Das

5. The advertising revolution: Past, present and future - Helen Powell

6. Magazine publishing in a global world - Andrew Blake

7. Diversity in magazines: Time to turn over a new leaf? - Andrew Blake and Simon Das

8. Independent thinking - David Stam

Index

Biography

Simon Das is Senior Lecturer in Magazine Publishing at the University for the Creative Arts (UCA). He was previously managing editor of UK black music monthly Touch magazine, a supplement project editor for Time Out and a freelance journalist for Arena and i-D in London, el País newspaper in Madrid and The Fader in New York.

David Stam is Associate Lecturer in Magazine Publishing at the University of the Arts London. He has been Managing Director within Reed Business Information and a Board Director of IPC Media. He has worked as a consultant for TSL Education, The Economist and The Spectator. In 2014, he co-edited Inside Magazine Publishing with Andrew Scott.

Andrew Blake is Associate Lecturer in Magazine Publishing at the University of the Arts London, having taught at the Universities of East London, Winchester and Southampton. He has written about many aspects of contemporary culture.