Having a tough time selling ads into your digital magazine? You are not alone. While it is near impossible to sell ads into digital replicas of print magazines, there is a thriving new breed of digital magazine originals blowing away the conventional wisdom that digital magazines are an ad sales death trap.
These digital original publishers are doing things very differently. One of true pioneers and success stories is Monkey Magazine, a “lad” book from the UK's Dennis Publishing, with an impressive 270,000 weekly ABCe audited circulation and robust ad sales.
I was honored when Eoin McSorley, Monkey magazine’s Editor agreed to answer some questions:
Josh: What about length? Monkey magazine is only about 30 pages per issue?
Eoin: We’ve played around with this. When our digital magazine arrives if it seems dense and people think they don’t have time to read it, they might not open it. So we keep it short and make it seem very easy to digest.
Josh: As a digital magazine you kept the page turns. Why?
Eoin: What we liked about the idea of a page turning magazine was that it has a beginning and an end, so it looks like it takes only take a little chunk of time to read. When you’re surfing the web, the only time constraints are ones you set for yourself. With Monkey we take a little chunk of 25 or 30 minutes each week and cover all the aspects of what young men would be looking on the web for anyway.
Josh: How was the start of selling advertising?
Eoin: Like any new thing, people were very tentative when we were starting to sell ads. One problem was that advertisers didn’t know where to categorize us. Are you a website or a magazine? Also, one of our biggest questions in the early stages was, “Who are we going to speak to?”
Josh: That was two years ago. Now you have a successful, ad supported, digital magazine. When you call on an ad agency do you call more on print buyers or online buyers?
Eoin: It varies from agency to agency. A lot of agencies are getting wiser to digital magazines now. But a traditional standard flat page in Monkey doesn’t work as well as one that has video content so we tend to be going more to online media departments now.
Josh: How do you handle click through reporting?
“We have a very open policy about letting people know exactly how many click throughs and page views they are getting. We generate great results. The results have been very good and I think our transparency has helped us a lot.
Josh : Do you have any advice for people starting an ad supported digital magazine
Eoin: You need to start with a list. If you’ve got a decent list then you can find out what they really like and what they don’t. Just keep it very honest. Then we react to what is happening on the net and add a little bit of structure. It is the same way that magazines like “The Week” condenses all the news for you. We condense all the fun stuff for young men.
I cannot tell you how impressed I am with Eoin McSorley and the innovators at Dennis Publishing. They started with a clean sheet of paper, took what really works in web based magazines, shed all preconceived notions about what is "supposed" to work about magazines, and created a successful business model.
The Media buying community has started to take notice:



so what is it going to take for this format to work in America?
are there other examples like this working elsewhere in the world?
Posted by: nuge | February 24, 2009 at 07:23 PM
The content you have provided is pretty interesting and useful and I will surely take note of the point you have made in the blog.
While I was browsing the Internet for ways to boost my website exposure, I read about how effective offline media is for getting additional exposure. Since online media advertising has become so competitive, I thought I will complement the online marketing efforts of my products with offline media advertising like newspaper and magazine advertising. This can be the best way to get a wider coverage for a website and draw additional traffic. I think it is a great marketing strategy to use both online and offline advertising to get more customers.
I thought this information might be useful for anyone looking for solutions to get me-ore traffic to their website.
Posted by: Randy Shamak | February 25, 2009 at 04:43 AM
I like the comment about keeping the magazine short. Great content but keeping it "short" is really important.
Thanks,
Will Fultz
Posted by: Top Sales Blog | March 04, 2009 at 07:15 AM
"The content you have provided is pretty interesting and useful and I will surely take note of the point you have made in the blog.
While I was browsing the Internet for ways to boost my website exposure, I read about how effective offline media is for getting additional exposure. Since online media advertising has become so competitive, I thought I will complement the online marketing efforts of my products with offline media advertising like newspaper and magazine advertising. This can be the best way to get a wider coverage for a website and draw additional traffic. I think it is a great marketing strategy to use both online and offline advertising to get more customers.
I thought this information might be useful for anyone looking for solutions to get me-ore traffic to their website.
Posted by: Randy Shamak | March 05, 2009 at 04:01 AM
Wow, it's so nice to read something positive about digital magazine ad sales. We're working toward building our own profitable digital mag, so I was glad to read the part about length, as we've kept ours pretty short, but also packed (without being overwhelming). We don't ask for sign-up yet, and the mag is completely free as a PDF. We appreciate any feedback: www.givingcity.com.
Posted by: Torquil Dewar | March 05, 2009 at 12:11 PM
I was just looking around for material on internet marketing and stumbled on your post. Nice post. I’m still looking for materials for my research.
Posted by: Jeff Paul Internet Business | March 13, 2009 at 02:29 AM
Amazing stuff.
Posted by: Sales Brochure Printing | March 13, 2009 at 11:40 PM
Nice post. It's great. I like this magazine's content. I looking this type of magazine for my study.
Thanks!
Posted by: Jahir Kamal | April 28, 2009 at 01:33 AM
One part of the advertising side of the business that has had us stumped is, who, where and how do we approach. We know which companies we think that we appeal to, but there is next to no information online about the system, the steps etc.
Do you contact the companies directly or is there a way to find out who is handling their marketing accounts?
Our theory is stay true to making the best publication we can and let them come to us...if you build it they will come.
Posted by: Adam | October 21, 2009 at 05:42 AM