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Haymarket’s Internet Title Joins Difficult Market

Haymarket’s Internet Title Joins Difficult Market

The rapid and constant rise of the internet has created, for publishers, a whole new editorial area for their magazine portfolios to cover. Since the Net began to take off seriously in the UK, around 1994, there have been around sixteen internet-related magazines launched. However, over half of these have since either been merged, suspended or closed.

Currently the UK’s biggest-selling title is EMAP’s Internet Magazine, which has a circulation of slightly over 50,000 copies a month. Just behind this is .Net, published by Future Publishing, which circulates at around 49,000 copies per month.

Internet Magazine Closures
Title Publishing Company Status Circulation Circulation Period
.Net Future Publishing Still Publishing 49,190 Jul 98-Dec 98
Internet Access Made Easy Paragon Publishing Still Publishing 7,899 Jul 97-Dec 97
Internet Business Internet Business Magazine Still Publishing 19,522 Jul 98-Dec 98
Internet Magazine Emap Still Publishing n/a n/a
Internet Works Future Publishing Still Publishing 19,094 Nov 97-Jan 98
Practical Internet Paragon Publishing Still Publishing 50,014 Jul 98-Dec 98
What’s Online Paragon Publishing Still Publishing 15,723 Jan 96-Jun 96
Net User Paragon Publishing Closed March 1997 21,821 Jul 98-Dec 98
Net Directory Future Publishing Closed May 1997 n/a n/a
Internet Age Forme Communications Suspended May 1997 n/a n/a
Internet Today Paragon Publishing Closed August 1997 11,552 Jul 96-Dec 96
Connect Callan Closed November 1997 n/a n/a
Internet World VNU Business Publications Suspended November 1997 14,388 Jan 96-Jun 96
Total Internet Rapide Publishing Closed February 1998 15,214 Jul 98-Dec 98
Web IDG Communications Closed February 1998 n/a n/a
Net Gamer Paragon Publishing Closed March 1998 n/a n/a
the net Haymarket Publications Launches 18 June 1999 13,555 Jul 98-Dec 98

However, later this month a new internet magazine is about to try its hand in the market and has the potential to become the biggest selling internet title with a launch circulation of around 200,000. Haymarket’s the net positions itself as a more lifestyle orientated magazine than the current Net titles.

Earlier this week, the net signed a deal with Dixons’ immensely successful free internet service provider, Freeserve (see Freeserve Joins Haymarket In Internet Mag Launch). Under the joint venture, the net will be distributed across Dixons’ chain of electrical shops and the magazine will feature a supplement containing information about Freeserve’s services.

Publishing manager, Mike Skyte, says that the net will be more lifestyle orientated than existing internet magazines. “Anything we produce, we want to be completely different from anything that has gone before,” he says

Martyn Moore, editor of Internet Magazine, says that their success lies in the business background of the publication – many of its readers work in the internet industry and others have progressed beyond ‘getting online’ and now want to become experts themselves. Commenting on the net‘s lifestyle approach to internet writing, Moore says: “Whether or not people will buy an internet magazine to read about films and football remains to be seen, but they might be onto something.”

A version of this article appeared as mediawatch in the media pages of today’s Times.

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