British Glamour To End Monthly Print Edition For Biannual Strategy; Combines Editorial And Business Teams

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Above Image: Glamour Magazine’s November Issue.

LONDON — We have been saying this for years now; “it’s an end of the era for print“.

This ‘go round, it is being reported that the UK edition of Glamour will end its monthly print edition and is set to become a digital-first platform as of December 2017, as Condé Nast Britain announces a biannual strategy.

According to Business of Fashion, “Condé Nast has confirmed the editorial and commercial teams will be combined, resulting in a yet-to-be-determined number of job losses. It’s an unprecedented move, given that magazines have typically kept some semblance ofchurch and state between editorial (not paid) and commercial (paid).”

At the time of this post, the publishing powerhouse did not comment on whether current editor-in-chief Jo Elvin would remain with the publication. It is rumored that current beauty director Alessandra Steinherr — who has 153,000 Instagram followers and who recently fronted a campaign for Garnier — will likely take on a bigger role.

The pivot follows a 2016 redesign of the magazine meant to freshen up the brand amidst falling advertising revenue and declining print sales. While the beauty industry is one of the last remaining sources of significant advertising revenue for print publications, brands continue to move more and more of their advertising spend online. The biannual print edition — pitched by Condé Nast as abeauty bible” — will be the third twice-yearly magazine in its UK portfolio (alongside Love magazine and GQ Style).”

In its new iteration, British Glamour will be “a multi-platform, mobile first brand, with social and events at its heart,” says publishing director Camilla Newman. “There is enormous potential for us to grow within this untapped space and to partner with brands who want innovative digital and live solutions.”

The publication hopes that branded content will form a major part of its revenue stream: the restructure follows research that found three quarters of Glamour’s readers — 2.6 million unique users online in May-June of this year — purchase beauty products recommended by the publication, while 83 percent of readers buy new beauty products every month.”

We will be empowering our advertisers with creative, collaborative and data-informed opportunities,” says Simon Gresham Jones, chief digital officer of Condé Nast Britain. “Web traffic is up 31 percent year on year, while the publication engages over 5 million readers across social media platforms including Instagram, Facebook and Twitter. In comparison, Glamour’s paid-for print sales fell by 7.1 percent between January-June to just under 250,000, according to Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) figures

Photos Credit: Courtesy

Source: BoF

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Donovan

Donovan is the CEO and Editor-In-Chief of www.dmfashionbook.com. For all general inquiries please email don@dmfashionbook.com Donovan has a BA in Journalism & Media Studies from the prestigious Rutgers University. He's currently studying entertainment and fashion law.