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SUSTAINABLE PUBLISHING
NZGeo has been an icon of environmental journalism for 35 years, but times are changing, and we need your help to survive.
It seems like every day brings bad news. Our planet is on fire, or flooding, or infected, or in recession. It’s tiring. As if to add to the existential stress, the media sector is now forecasting its own death. But this is also a time when we can take proactive steps to decide what’s important, and what we want for our future. Over the next few weeks I will be taking the unusual step of opening our finances and forward plans so that readers can be involved in the future shape of New Zealand Geographic and the role our journalism plays in the public conversation. I hope this paints a picture of where we’re at, where we’re going, and how you can help. Before I start, however—thank you. Thank you for reading NZGeo, and for caring enough to read this email. * My first feature for New Zealand Geographic, in 2005, was about Auckland’s Pakistani community, told from the perspective of taxi drivers. I attended mosques, chatted with drivers in their cabs, cheered on the Pakistan Sports Club cricket team in the grand final (all taxi drivers, they lost) and sipped chai in New Lynn. It was a bright window into a new world, and an introduction to the format that has set New Zealand Geographic apart for 35 years. Here was space to tell a story in a creative and entertaining way. Whole spreads given over to photography. You could tackle any subject you liked, so long as it revealed something true and important about our society or environment. In 2008 I became editor. And then, in 2011, the owner. (No link with National Geographic, which is owned by Disney. We’re a Kiwi family with two kids and a wandering golden retriever trying to fix up an old house in Birkenhead.) It took another eight years to make ends meet, but it’s always felt worthwhile—at their best, stories like these can usher in new ways of seeing the world, and behaving. * “So how’s it all going at NZGeo?” People used to ask me this question cheerfully. We had won Magazine of the Year a record seven times. Readership was up. The internet was helping with marketing but not denting sales. Recently, however, my mates tend to wince as they ask me, like they’re enquiring about the health of a grandmother. Subscriptions have returned to pre-COVID levels and retail sales are soft. Advertising is holding up, but it’s harder than ever. Print costs have increased 50 per cent in the past five years. Postal costs have tripled in the past 10. Though the magazine is our most popular product, the economics of print are getting challenging. Most surprising, however, is that digital media is now even harder. Our website receives about a million visitors a year, and the Ministry of Education subscribes on behalf of every student in every school. But traffic coming from social media sites like Facebook and Instagram has plummeted, and changes to Google’s algorithm stymie readers coming from search. For the first time, I’m looking at the future with genuine concern. * Here’s something that might surprise you. With 387,000 readers (Nielsen-audited readership) New Zealand Geographic is the fourth-most-read magazine on the newsstand. Unlike other magazines that skew old, white and urban, our readership aligns with national averages for ethnicity, location, gender and age—except we have more teenagers; and more Māori and Pasifika read NZGeo than any other magazine, by miles.
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