20460 - INTERNET, PUBLISHING AND MUSIC
Department of Management and Technology
PAOLA DUBINI
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
The course is divided into three modules:
- Digital platforms and the new ecology for content production, diffusion and access.
- Transformation of specific industries: Newspapers – books – music - advertising.
- Entrepreneurial and project management in content industries. These aspects are highlighted in specific sessions and are tested in practice through the field projects.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Identify the drivers of transformation in content industries.
- Recognize different business models in content industries and assess value appropriation mechanisms.
- Compare business models across content industries and appreciate competition and cooperation opportunities.
- Analyse the transformation in consumption patterns for hedonic goods.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Integrate knowledge, manage complexity and make judgements even with partial information, on highly turbulent competitive environments.
- The course will test students' abilities in:
- Problem setting and customer orientation (field projects).
- Information selection and analytical skills in complex settings (individual essay 1).
- Problem solving and synthesis (individual essay 2).
- Synthesis and macro-trends elaboration (wrap-up case presentation).
- Multimedia narratives and presentation (wrap-up case and field project presentation).
- Constructive and active participation (class participation).
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Case studies /Incidents (traditional, online)
- Individual assignments
- Group assignments
DETAILS
- Guest speakers are involved to provide hands' on experiences and to give opportunity to students to meet potential employers.
- Case studies are chosen so as to highlight different mechanisms of value appropriation and to foster analytical skills.
- Individual assignments develop students' skills in information selection and analytical skills in complex settings (individual essay 1) and in problem solving and synthesis (individual essay 2).
- Group assignments consist in field projects developed for specific external public or private "customers", that stimulate participants abilities in problem setting and customer orientation (field projects).
- Several presentations and discussions strenthen students' ability to speak in public and to effectively present their ideas and fact based narratives.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
---|---|---|---|
|
x | ||
|
x | ||
|
x | ||
|
x |
ATTENDING STUDENTS
Attending students participate to class activity, and prepare all required tests (as detailed below). The status of attending students is valid until June session of exams. Students not completing all requirements automatically become non-attending students.
- The two individual essays account 20% of final grade each.
- Wra up group presentation accounts 20% of final grade (15% faculty 5% peers).
- The field project accounts 30% of the grade (25% faculty 5% peers).
- Class participation acocunts 10% of the grade.
- Individual essay 1. This essay should be focused on content industries as a whole, and urges you to put the consultant’s glasses on, depicting what’s hot and relevant out there, mainly supporting your ideas by figures, numbers and real examples. Main skills expected: analytical thinking and problem setting, relevant information selection, synthesis, and prescriptive argumentation. Pick a title among those provided below; as the topics are very broadly defined, make sure your essays start with a precise definition of your specific object of analysis:
- Performance metrics: measuring content industries in transition.
- Paradoxes in content industries economics.
- The changing role of consumers (and consumption patterns).
- Individual essay 2. This essay should address hurdles common to all content industries, spotting trends, practices and processes with respect to specific issues, and synthetizing them up in a sort of “how-to guide”. This assignment pushes students to put the manager’s/entrepreneur’s glasses on, and to address strategic decisions impacting publishers - being either music labels and publishing houses - in their business sustainability. Main skills expected: business models understanding, problem solving, and synthesis. Titles for Individual essay 2 is provided during the semester. Assessment Criteria for essays:
- Level of analysis (research depth, information selection, fact-based opinions, figures-supported reasoning).
- Level of elaboration (information presentation, originality of point of view, internal consistency).
- Quality of writing (arguments organization, thoughtful structure, discourse fluency)
- Wrap up group presentation. Students are asked to work in groups to the elaboration of a case (a list of cases is provided, each group one case) to be presented in class. Each case emphasises issues covered during the semester and focus on the converging phenomena of content industries and IT, hardware, software industries. In preparing the case, students have to search for further materials and complementary information, in order to deliver a 20 mins lesson upon their assigned theme. Further instructions are provided during the course.
- Field project. Projects test students’ ability to analyze the environment, select critical information, assess alternative options, organize evidence, and persuade others, interacting with real opportunities offered by real companies/institutions. As the professional future in these industries are in many instances entrepreneurial in nature, the goal of the project is to increase students’ ability to think and act in an entrepreneurial way. Therefore, all projects are open to an array of alternatives, and students are strongly encouraged to be proactive in their search for information and in providing suggestions. Projects are presented at the beginning of the semester; attending students are divided into groups according to their preferences on which project to work on.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
The final exam is administered at the end of the course (May or June sessions). It takes the form of an essay, with articles or blog posts provided as starting point. The purpose of the exam is to assess the ability of students to address a specific issue with accuracy, but at the same time relate to a broader context in rapid transformation. In order to pass the exam, a minimum grade of 18/31 is required. The exam is open books. The essay accounts for 100% of the grade.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Course material are made available via course reserve or through EGEA. Slideshows with links to updated material available on the web are distributed via Bboard.