Image courtesy of www.summitmedia.com.ph
Source: www.summitmedia.com.ph
The official statement from the company's president Lisa Gokongwei-Cheng.
With over 20 million unique monthly users visiting its 15 websites and 33 million more fans following its brands on social media platforms, Summit Media is now the Philippines’ leading digital lifestyle network, and one of the top two local digital media companies in the country. Its expertise in creating data-informed quality content has allowed it to reach digital audiences comprising more than 25% of the country’s Internet population.
This month, Summit Media completes its full digital transformation. The 450-strong company can now be called "digital-first" as it bids farewell to its magazine past, closing the six remaining print editions of brands already thriving online as Cosmo.ph, Preview.ph, Pep.ph, Topgear.com.ph, FHM.com.ph, and Townandcountry.ph.
Summit Media president Lisa Gokongwei-Cheng said in an official statement: “As we embark on our new journey towards a wholly digital future, we look back at the values that made us successful, and one thing that stands out is our respect for our audiences. Our brands, each with its own strong voice and well-defined identity, have resonated with our audiences because they stand for something, which is why for 23 years, Summit published the most successful and well-loved magazines in the country’s history.
Today, we embrace the way our highly connected audiences now prefer to consume content. As we follow them from print to digital, we will continue our relentless pursuit and delivery of quality, up-to-the minute content and a dynamic and engaging editorial experience—this time, aided by data, which now pervades and informs many of our editorial decisions.
Being highly data-informed arms us with an even better understanding of our audiences, enabling us to create more stories that appeal to their minds and passions, and empowering us to help our advertisers craft effective messages relevant to their audiences. In the past three years, Summit Media has become the leading creator of digital native advertising content in the country, generating more volume than all our competitors combined. On top of this transformation, the company’s other pillars, Outside of Home (OOH) media, book publishing, and content marketing remain robust.
Summit Media was born auspiciously in an era of pulp and ink. We will always owe a debt of gratitude to the medium, to the brilliant teams whose dedication and efforts created magazines that excelled in that landscape, to the generations of loyal readers who not only supported their favorite brands but even imbibed their tenets and values, and to our advertisers, without whose partnership with and belief in us we would not have succeeded. Moving forward and into the future, we are excited as we continue to reinvent ourselves to become an even more compelling destination in a digital era where opportunities abound.”
Ano anong mags ang under Summut?
ReplyDeleteSummut hindi ako sure pero Summit media, Preview, FHM, Cosmo, Town and Country binasa mo na lang sana hehehe
DeleteMarami. Yes, Preview, FHM, Cosmo, Esquire, Yummy, etc. Dami siguro na layoff.
DeleteCosmopolitan, YES, Preview, Town and Country, Top Gear, FHM ang mga natirang magazines in print na mawawala na rin. Ilan sa mga nawala na in the past months/years are Candy, K-Zone, Total Girl, WITCH, Games Master, Esquire etc.
DeleteHalatang di ka nagbabasa baks! Kaloka!
DeletePaano kung brownout o blakout
Delete532 antayin mong makapagisip ka ng paraan.
DeleteThis is a sad news for a multipurpose cooperative who uses their old magazine to create a paper jewelry ☹️
Delete5:32 - Paano naman nakapag-post ng tanong si 12:30 kung blackout?
DeleteWow. Idk if il be happy or frightned. Nothing beats the smell of raw paper and printed ink
ReplyDeleteAgree!
DeleteThis is sad. Nothing beats the printed word. Sana limited circulation na lang.
DeleteAng naaawa ako sa mga tao sa printing na mawawalan ng trabaho.. 😞😞
DeleteIt's good for the environment. For your info, paper is made from trees! And ink is toxic. So long print media!
Deletesad... mahilig pa naman ako bumili ng back issue sa BOOKSALE kse mura.. ( oo na i kennot afford the new ed haha purita)
DeleteNatawa ako kay 1:48 na "for your info" talaga na gawa sa trees ang paper hahahaha
DeleteTrue! Pati mga greeting cards puro digital na. Haayyy, i miss the good old days talaga.
DeleteI'm glad we keep all our magazines from the past since the 80's
DeleteHindi siguro na-orient si 1:48 na pwede naman i-recycle ang papel.
DeletePero yes it is really sad dahil may mga apektado ang kabuhayan. At wala pa ring tatalo sa sarap magbasa kapag hawak mo ang binabasa mo.
Kasi mas madali tumingin sa online compare sa newspapers 20-50 pesos per news paper. Kaya nalulugi.
DeleteIm glad na umabot din ako sa generation n uso ang books, magazine, komiks, newspaper.
DeleteYou could kind of see it coming na din, dahil nagdedeteriorate na din ang quality nung mga ipinapublish the past few years, kung sino sino nalang ang nagkakalibro para lang makabenta. Alex gonzaga, yung marcelo guy, etc. Parang iniimply na din na hindi na ganun kavaluable ang mga libro kung kahit hindi ganun kagaling magsulat basta may following eh pwede magpublish. I've always been under the impression na kaya nga purita ang mga writer dahil hindi ganun kadali sumulat ng libro, lalo na yung maghanap ng magpupublish ng gawa mo. Eh sa internet, other than wala kang malaking gastos to post content out there, di din main requirement yung matinong quality, basta catchy ang headline at curious enough ang mga tao to click on it, then boom, pera na yung click na yun basahin man nila o hindi.
DeleteSana lang yung mga digital content ay hindi katulad ng ABSCBN website na mali mali info tungkol sa mga sinusulat nila.
DeleteAyyy so sad pero inevitable. Print is a dying form of media. Naaalala ko pa noong 80s when I was a kid Mod magazine lang Meron. Favorite ko doon was yun Adventures into the Unknown. Some of the stories I read there were really scary fun.
ReplyDeleteat naalala ko nga yan adventures of the unknown, scary nga and I always looked forward to reading it
DeleteLiwayway hahaha
DeleteYes Mod magazine and Women's Journal...😄 I wonder though, People, Cosmo international, Vanity Fair,Glamour are still thriving with both print and digital formats
DeleteMagazines sales are down na Kaya. Ang mahal pa. It's E magazines na.. Tapos may Pinterest pa...Tapos you can share also mga magazine thru social media ha.. isang picture Lang ka kalat na agad...
ReplyDeletePaano na yan!? Wala na akong mababasa habang nasa salon lalo na ang Yes magazine.
ReplyDelete@ 12:34a - Invest in a good and reliable smart phone and phone plan or go to where there is good wi-fi. Lahat yan maaaccess mo sa web browser mo.
DeleteIba pa rin ang print. Oh well.
ReplyDeletePaano ang YES?!?
ReplyDeleteSO mas matatag pala ang MEGA. Bye, Preview on Print :(
mas mura naman kasi talaga pag Digital eh
ReplyDeleteThat's sad. Pag pumupunta ako sa magazine area ng bookstore at supermarket halos lahat ng Summit titles ang makikita like YES!, Cosmopolitan, Esquire etc. (except sa FHM na sa liquor area ng supermarket at sa likod ng bookstore cashier).
ReplyDeleteSame. Dami ko collection
DeleteCosmo, Preview, FHM, Yes, ?
ReplyDeleteBittersweet. Iba pa rin kase yung feeling of flipping the pages of the glossies. Para bang nagsesend ng signal sa brain na ito na time to relax and chill na.
ReplyDeleteTrue! Hindi pa nakaka.strain sa mata unlike computer monitor or cellphone screen
DeleteKala ko thriving ang print mags dahil sa mga fanclubs. Di pala.
ReplyDelete@12:50 kung sila lang ang customer na bumibili talagang malululugi mga magazines. Kung walang hatak sa casual viewers/readers wala talaga kahit malaki pa fansclub.
DeleteThis is sad. End of an era
ReplyDeletetruly the end of an era. even bookstores are closing down in the US.
Delete1:18 hala ate wala namang ganyang balita.
Delete6:55, it's true. Less ppl go buy books at places like barnes & noble when u can get it cheaper from amazon. Borders bookstores closed few years ago. Even smaller bookshops have been struggling to stay open specially in smaller towns.
DeleteSign of the times. Bookstores, toy stores are closing down.
DeleteSayang di na malalaman ng mga bagets ang kasayahan ng pagbili ng mga ganitong bagay.
Nothing beats the thrill of opening a new book or magazine for the very first time. And yes the smell of paper and ink. And thumbing through crisp pages.
ReplyDeleteTrue that! Nothing beats the feeling of being surrounded by books too.
DeleteMahilig ako mangolekta ng magazines. I still have the ones from the 90s! Di yun matutumbasan ng digimags!!!
ReplyDeletePero ang dami nang kopya ng local digital magazines na nagkalat online. Pano pa sila kikita kung pwede naman makuha yung mga digital magazines nila for free?
ReplyDeletePano yan? So soon may pa-tablet na rin sa mga parlor para yun ang babasahin mo habang nagpapakulot ka? Kasi wala nang mabubuklat na magazine haha
ReplyDeleteSummit naman, some people still prefer to read by opening the pages. Kung ako nga, sumasakit ang mata ko sa screen kapag matagal.
ReplyDeletetita problems 1:05
DeleteAno na babasahin ko sa salon/parlor? Summit magazines lang masaya basahin pag ganun, puro hair magazines nalang matitira, hahaha
ReplyDeletePaano na lang yung mga elderly na hindi techy? pag asa salon ka or waiting area, past time din ito
ReplyDeleteIn short, nalugi! Dyaske, hirap mag one plus one equals two nga tao ngayon.
DeleteKawawa naman yung mga mawawalam ng work sa production dept. 😢
ReplyDeleteOn the positive note mababawasan ang pag gamit ng paper. Good for mother earth!
ReplyDeleteGood side of this is less trees will be cut and less clutter. It’s sad though kasi a lot will be jobless..
ReplyDeleteKaya pala website na lang yung Candymag. Buti nasae ko pa rin yung mga akin. Tsaka Totalgirl, Seventeen at Cosmo,etc. I feel sad kasi parang kinalakihan ko sila na para bang may magazine na kasabayan ng journey ko.
ReplyDeleteMay isang area pa naman ang Book Sale na dedicated lang sa lahat ng Summit titles.
ReplyDeleteShems Booksale :(
DeleteSo goodbye na rin ba ito sa Cosmo Bachelors Bash. :'( huhuhu
ReplyDeleteNatawa ko dito hahaha
DeletePano na ang mga cosmo hunk na tinatabi ko sa pagtulog ko?!
ReplyDeletetrue. yearly pa nmn ako bumibili ng cosmo69hunks.. print2x na lang tayo nito sa bahay bwahaha
DeleteNakakalungkot ito iba padin and print mags..ilang balibayan box ang cosmo ko college days pa every month kailanhan meron ako non..hayy..
ReplyDeleteang hindi ko knows ay kung pano sila kikita sa ganitong marketing strategy? o sige online pero ano ito sa dami ng ads or sa dami ng likes? parang You tube ba ito.
ReplyDeleteYou pay for a subscription so that you can access the magazine contents aside sa usual ads. Di naman libre ang online edition.
DeleteIt's sad, but inevitable. Ppl use their comps and phone more to look at magazine sites than buy the actual mag. Also, more ppl are now conscious about the environment more than ever. I used to collect mags for years, but now have disposed them cuz after awhile they just collect dust.
ReplyDeletebad idea ang digital magazine masmadali icopy at ipirate compare sa printed
ReplyDeletesana the displaced workers will be given compensation.
ReplyDeleteoh em gee this is so nostalgic. i grew up with reading summit media titles. k zone, total girl, whitch, good gods! hindi na ba nagbabasa ng papel ang mga bata ngayon???
ReplyDelete