When the voice personals
business was going strong, Kerry Farley, ad director at NUVO newsweekly
in Indianapolis, estimates that a well-written "Woman seeks Man" ad was
worth $267 a week to him. That's because it would
motivate a string of eager men to spend several minutes on the 900
phone line checking out women's voicemail messages. In terms of
minutes on the phone, money was no object for these ardent would-be
Romeos.
But
lately, the personals business has been bleak. Farley knows why. He blames
the free personals on Yahoo! and America Online for stealing his revenue.
After all, why pay to find the lady of your dream if you don't' have to?
Save it for the date. business in conventional, newspaper personals is off
at lest 25% for most publications, estimates Peter Brennan, Director of
development at TPI Group, a company that sets us personals systems for
papers.
But
whining won't put money toward the bottom line, so what's the solutions? How
does a newspaper revive the personals product and keep the cash flowing?
At
the Orlando Weekly, conventional personals are up 57%. Publisher Alisa
Cromer credits several factors, but her favorite is a personals' personality
known only by the unique name, Michelle Valentine.
Valentine was hired to promote a variety of Weekly project but soon
settled into the business of giving the personals class and pizzazz. She has
her own cable show that interviews personals users. She offers seminars in
finding romance, and she devises and attends promotional singles
social events, often co-sponsored with radio stations and/or clubs.
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