This volume considers how media firms, as well as entire industries, exist and persist over time despite what often seems to be intense competition for such resources as audiences and advertisers. Addressing competition within and among media organizations and industries, including broadcasting, cable, and the Internet, author John W. Dimmick studies the media industries through the niche theory lens, developed by bioecologists to explain competition and coexistence. He examines the targets of the different media--audience, advertisers, money--and how they compete, using examples from a variety of studies. Each chapter incorporates relevant economic constructs into the analytic framework. This approach includes the use of economics of scale to explain selection and firm mortality in newspapers and movie theaters; the application of the transaction costs concept to explicate the rise of advertising agencies; the employment of the strategic group concept in analyzing the niche breadth strategy; and the measurement of gratifications-utilities. A comprehensive overview of the determinants of media competition and coexistence, Media Competition and Coexistence: The Theory of the Niche offers unique insights for scholars, students, researchers, and practitioners in media economics, management, and business.
Author(s): John W. Dimmick
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: 158
Subject Index......Page 8
Preface......Page 10
Acknowledgments......Page 12
reading......Page 14
2 The Theory of the Niche......Page 36
3 Competition for Advertising......Page 56
4 The Niche and the Strategic Group: The Niche-Breadth Strategy......Page 77
5 The Gratification-Utility Niche......Page 90
6 Further Aspects of Competition and Coexistence......Page 118
7 The Community Level: Niche Difference, Coexistence, and Complexity......Page 131
References......Page 140