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Worth Magazine Costs $20, Unless You Can Afford It

Filed under: Wealth

worth magazineGiven that the magazine industry is in nearly as tough shape as the newspaper industry it seems a bold time relaunch a magazine, especially a magazine that caters to the wealthy. But Worth magazine which trimmed its staff a couple of months ago and shifted operations from New York to Florida will relaunch in May as a bimonthly with a steep $20 cover price.

The hook is that you won't have to pay that if you are rich. Sandow Media will create two versions of the magazine. As Ad Age reports, a smaller version of the magazine with better paper, more photos and a classy matte finish will go out for free in a sealed envelope to 110,000 people with a minimum net worth of $2 million who live in one of the 11 major markets. The individuals were chosen using research data and address exclusivity. Everyone else can buy theirs on the newsstand for the $20 cover price, a price which puts it in the top niche at the newsstand flanked perhaps by a few obscure European fashion magazines and chic design journals.

Will this strategy prove Worth's value to advertisers? The selling point is obvious, your ad will land on the doorstep of some of the richest people in the country. Worth is working with Paladin Registry, an information-services company, to make sure that the investment companies that advertise are top performers and a custom advertorial section is planned. It remains to be seen whether or not the Worth name is enough to inspire trust and deliver those advertisers a good response. The rich are being pitched constantly by a wide variety of companies and the biggest fish are often the most difficult to land.

After the launch of the May issue, Worth won't come out again until the October/November issue, which will give the magazine a chance to fine-tune their pitch. It will then be bimonthly and an expansion to more markets is planned. The Worth website, which will relaunch in May, will offer selected content to subscribers with a password.

What's in a Name?

A rose by any other name would still be a rose, but if you called it Elvis, you could certainly charge a lot more for it. Celebrity names and images have a lot of selling power because they provide instant recognizability; they are their own brands. Business Week determined the worth of the names of 13 celebrities. Two on the list have sold the rights to their names almost entirely, three are deceased, but still making a large amount of money annually, and the rest of the people are still building up their price tags.

  • Muhammad Ali - $63 million, sold in April of this year
  • George Foreman - $137.5 million, sold in 1999
  • Albert Einstein - $1 million annually
  • Marilyn Monroe - $1.25 million annually
  • Paris Hilton $15 million annually
  • Tiger Woods - $21 million annually
  • P Diddy - $22 million annually
  • Michael Jordon - $25 million annually
  • Jennifer Lopez - $35 million annually
  • Elvis Presley - $40 million annually
  • Elizabeth Taylor - $50 million annually
  • Donald Trump - $280 million annually

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