Jacek Utko: Can design save the newspaper?

84,990 views ・ 2009-03-31

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
Newspapers are dying for a few reasons.
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00:15
Readers don't want to pay for yesterday's news, and advertisers follow them.
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00:19
Your iPhone, your laptop,
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00:21
is much more handy than New York Times on Sunday.
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00:24
And we should save trees in the end.
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00:27
So it's enough to bury any industry.
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00:30
So, should we rather ask, "Can anything save newspapers?"
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00:34
There are several scenarios for the future newspaper.
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00:36
Some people say it should be free;
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00:39
it should be tabloid, or even smaller: A4;
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00:42
it should be local, run by communities,
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00:45
or niche, for some smaller groups like business --
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00:47
but then it's not free; it's very expensive.
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00:50
It should be opinion-driven;
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00:52
less news, more views.
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00:55
And we'd rather read it during breakfast,
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00:57
because later we listen to radio in a car,
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01:00
check your mail at work and in the evening you watch TV.
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01:03
Sounds nice, but this can only buy time.
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01:06
Because in the long run,
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01:08
I think there is no reason, no practical reason
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01:10
for newspapers to survive.
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01:13
So what can we do?
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01:15
(Laughter)
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01:16
Let me tell you my story.
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01:18
20 years ago, Bonnier, Swedish publisher,
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01:21
started to set newspapers in the former Soviet Bloc.
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01:25
After a few years, they had several newspapers in central and eastern Europe.
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01:28
They were run by an inexperienced staff,
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01:31
with no visual culture, no budgets for visuals --
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01:36
in many places there were not even art directors.
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01:38
I decided to be -- to work for them as an art director.
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01:42
Before, I was an architect, and my grandmother asked me once,
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01:45
"What are you doing for a living?"
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01:47
I said, "I'm designing newspapers."
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01:49
"What? There's nothing to design there. It's just boring letters"
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01:52
(Laughter)
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01:53
And she was right. I was very frustrated, until one day.
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01:57
I came to London, and I've seen performance by Cirque du Soleil.
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02:01
And I had a revelation. I thought,
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02:03
"These guys took some creepy,
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02:05
run-down entertainment,
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02:07
and put it to the highest possible level of performance art."
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02:11
I thought "Oh my God, maybe I can do the same with these boring newspapers."
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02:14
And I did. We started to redesign them, one by one.
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02:18
The front page became our signature.
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02:21
It was my personal intimate channel to talk to the readers.
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02:25
I'm not going to tell you stories about teamwork or cooperation.
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02:29
My approach was very egotistic.
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02:31
I wanted my artistic statement,
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my interpretation of reality.
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02:36
I wanted to make posters, not newspapers.
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02:38
Not even magazines: posters.
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02:40
We were experimenting with type,
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with illustration, with photos. And we had fun.
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02:46
Soon it started to bring results.
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02:49
In Poland, our pages were named
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02:53
"Covers of the Year" three times in a row.
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02:57
Other examples you can see here are from
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02:59
Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia
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03:01
and central European countries.
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03:05
But it's not only about the front page.
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03:08
The secret is that we were treating
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03:10
the whole newspaper as one piece,
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03:12
as one composition -- like music.
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03:16
And music has a rhythm, has ups and downs.
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03:20
And design is responsible for this experience.
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03:24
Flipping through pages is readers experience,
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03:26
and I'm responsible for this experience.
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03:29
We treated two pages, both spreads, as a one page,
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03:32
because that's how readers perceive it.
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03:35
You can see some Russian pages here which got many awards
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03:37
on biggest infographic competition in Spain.
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03:41
But the real award came from Society for Newspaper Design.
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03:46
Just a year after redesigning this newspaper in Poland,
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they name it the World's Best-Designed Newspaper.
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03:51
And two years later,
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the same award came to Estonia.
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03:56
Isn't amazing?
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03:59
What really makes it amazing: that the circulation of these newspapers
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04:01
were growing too.
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04:03
Just some examples:
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04:05
in Russia, plus 11 after one year,
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04:07
plus 29 after three years of the redesign.
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04:10
Same in Poland: plus 13, up to 35 percent
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04:13
raise of circulation after three years.
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04:16
You can see on a graph,
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04:18
after years of stagnation, the paper started to grow,
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04:21
just after redesign.
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04:24
But the real hit was in Bulgaria.
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04:26
And that is really amazing.
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04:30
Did design do this?
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04:32
Design was just a part of the process.
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04:34
And the process we made was not about changing the look,
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04:36
it was about improving the product completely.
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04:40
I took an architectural rule about function and form
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04:43
and translated it into newspaper content and design.
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04:46
And I put strategy at the top of it.
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04:48
So first you ask a big question: why we do it? What is the goal?
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04:51
Then we adjust the content accordingly.
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04:53
And then, usually after two months, we start designing.
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04:56
My bosses, in the beginning, were very surprised.
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04:58
Why am I asking all of these business questions,
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05:00
instead of just showing them pages?
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05:02
But soon they realized that this is the new role of designer:
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05:04
to be in this process from the very beginning to the very end.
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05:07
So what is the lesson behind it?
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05:09
The first lesson is about that design can change not just your product.
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05:13
It can change your workflow -- actually, it can change everything in your company;
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05:17
it can turn your company upside down.
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05:19
It can even change you.
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05:21
And who's responsible? Designers.
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05:24
Give power to designers.
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05:26
(Applause)
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05:30
But the second is even more important.
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05:33
You can live in a small poor country, like me.
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05:36
You can work for a small company,
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05:39
in a boring branch.
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05:41
You can have no budgets, no people --
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05:43
but still can put your work to the highest possible level.
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05:47
And everybody can do it.
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05:49
You just need inspiration, vision and determination.
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05:53
And you need to remember that to be good
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05:55
is not enough.
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05:57
Thank you.
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