A decade-old idea
I’ve long wondered why the NY Times and other newspapers don’t regularly engage in affiliate links — turning book review sections into potential money makers, and this Vanity Fair profile of Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. finally answers that question for me:
Her biggest disappointment came when she crafted a potentially lucrative partnership with Amazon.com, already the biggest bookseller on the Internet. The Times would link all the titles reviewed in the paper’s prestigious Sunday Book Review section, ordinarily a money drain, to the online bookseller and receive a percentage on every book sold. “We could have made the Book Review into a big source of revenue,†she recalls. Baker knew that Amazon.com planned to eventually sell everything under the sun, to become the first digital supermarket. Not only would the deal have produced revenue from book sales, it would also have cemented a partnership with a tremendous future. She envisioned the newspaper as a virtual merchandising machine. Instead of the old carpet-bombing model of advertising, it would in effect target ads to readers of specific stories. “You know what they said?,†Baker recalls. “They said, We can’t do it, because Barnes & Noble is a big advertiser.â€Â

