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Wall Street Journal launches fashion magazine

By FashionUnited

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So fashion is getting serious. Or are we getting serious about fashion. The Wall Street Journal last week introduced a glossy magazine to broaden its appeal beyond its core business reader focusing on high fashion, preppy sports and luxury travel. Called WSJ., the magazine hits newsstands at a time of many publications folding in tough economic climes, reported Reuters, as magazines are strugglingto keep advertisers who would rather spend their increasingly limited marketing budgets elsewhere, particularly the Web.

Wall Street Journal executives say they gave no thought to delaying the magazine, however, pointing out that the magazine expands the newspaper's advertising base. When it launched on September 6, the magazine will have 51 advertisers, of which 19 are new to the newspaper's franchise.

"This is a phenomenal response in a very, very challenging market," said Michael Rooney, chief revenue officer at the Wall Street Journal.

Similar in feel to the Financial Times' "How to Spend It," the Wall Street Journal rolls out its version of a lifestyle magazine to a circulation of 960,000. It will be included in the weekend edition of The Wall Street Journal in the United States and the Friday edition of the newspaper in Asia and Europe. WSJ. appears quarterly before becoming monthly in mid-2009.

Rooney said the magazine draws "the ultimate demographic," describing a reader with an average household income of $265,000 and $2.9 million in assets, who took seven leisure trips last year and spent 16 days sailing.

A glossy 104 pages with advertisers such as Burberry, Louis Vuitton and British Airways, the initial issue is devoted to stories about rare mushrooms, fashion for dogs, folk art and Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin's workout routine.

While WSJ. editor-in-chief Tina Gaudoin promised the magazine would have the "DNA of the Journal running through its veins," the magazine is nonetheless a departure from the breaking news and business features that have long been the backbone of the paper.

Source: Reuters
Image: WSJ Magazine


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