Emerging talent. 1,700 patents and more than 120 years of brand heritage. Funky carpets in cinema multiplexes from the ‘90s. These are just a few of the topics that brands like Spring Studios, Herman Miller, and A24, respectively, are bandying about in their new print magazines. Unlike the traditional life cycle of PR, press, publish, and repeat, these brands are funneling resources into storytelling on their own terms. The shift coincides with a tumultuous media landscape that sees legacy publishers very publicly grappling with labor relations, profitability, AI slop and leadership.
While all three brands do continue to work with traditional media, helming their own publications grants them a certain freedom that gets lost when media bonafides have to reckon with issues of page allocation, advertiser relations, and whether or not a pitch is even a “fit.” After all, it’s hard to imagine anyone other than, say, Herman Miller, running a feature dedicated to its furniture stress-testing protocol as its newly published collectible tome, Ideas, does.