The New York Times Company (NYSE:NYT) on Wednesday announced a partnership with Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) to offer its readers and curious caffeine guzzlers “enhanced access” to the paper’s website through the coffee company’s digital network.
The new deal offers Starbucks customers access to 15 free articles per day through the Wi-Fi network in a given coffee shop. These articles, to be selected (or curated, depending on how you want to look at it) by the paper itself, will consist of three articles from the News, Business, Technology and Most Emailed sections, with the fifth section featuring rotating special sections of the daily print paper, according to the company's statement.
The newspaper already grants readers access to 10 articles per month, and a Times spokesman told GigaOM that this increased access will not affect the pre-existing paywall. Rather, the 15 additional articles offered daily through a given Starbucks location’s wi-fi will be offered in addition to the monthly limit.
What does the national “newspaper of record” stand to gain from this new deal with the world’s largest coffeehouse chain? In the company’s statement on Wednesday, senior VP of marketing and circulation Yasmin Namini said the “Starbucks is the ideal setting for The Times to offer enhanced digital access,” but did not elaborate as to why that’s the case.
Considering the expansive global reach Starbucks offers, the New York Times may find it an attractive partner simply by dint of the sheer number of people it would be drawing in to preview its content (though the Times added the new “enhanced access” will on be “available only in U.S. company-operated stores that offer free AT&T Wi-Fi”). The deal may come across as an olive branch to frustrated readers unable to circumvent the website’s “metered paywall” as easily as they used to since the company has begun to actually police its own loopholes for online access.
If curbing unfettered access to the website was its main goal, however, The New York Times already seems to be failing in this regard. NYClean, a popular workaround which has been around since the paywall was first erected in 2011, is still alive and well as of this writing. And media blogger Jim Romenesko -- who incidentally also runs a blog called “Starbucks Gossip,” which focuses exclusively on the coffee chain -- was already able to gain access to all of The New York Times' web content at Starbucks.
But say you’re too lazy, terrified of privacy violations or morally sanctified to not lend some financial support to the New York Times for producing high-quality journalism. Would using the new “enhanced access” make sense as a consumer -- assuming you’re not already subscribing to some version of the New York Times for the above reasons?
As an experiment of sorts, I walked over the Starbucks location just a few steps away from the IBTimes' office down in the Financial District -- this is New York City, after all, where it often feels like there are more Starbucks locations than people. Today's print edition of The New York Times costs $2. The cheapest cup of coffee I could find was $1.85. The cheapest food item was a $1.50 cake pop, but I’m not sure that fits under the purview of acceptable items to munch on while reading the news.
Math shows it only costs an extra 15 cents to get unlimited access -- or the same content as the “enhanced” Starbucks version of the New York Times, plus a ton of other articles that you can read on your own time, and even -- dare I say it -- access outside of the borders of Starbucks Wi-Fi (gasp).
I’m not a behavioral economist, but the value added here seems to fall squarely on Starbucks, which now boast augmented customer service by offering a sample of The New York Times, widely recognized as one of the best newspapers in the world. The new deal may help The New York Times in some more ephemeral way than it does Starbucks -- say, by helping expand its readership or build awareness for its brand. But if finding the most cost-effective way to read the news is my main goal, I’d rather splurge the extra 15 cents on a hard-copy of the paper and find some coffee that’s isn’t quite so overpriced.
Then again, I guess if it really was that simple, print publications wouldn’t be turning into an endangered species.
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