Airtech
Published

Making news accessible

CT Editor-in-chief Jeff Sloan says the CT Staff is "letting CT do what it does best: Cover the news behind the breaking news."

Share

Printed magazines are chronologically challenged. While we here at CT expend great effort on in-depth, technical exploration of the design, tooling and manufacturing of complex composite structures, timely delivery of the latest news is not possible in a bi-monthly magazine. By the time you receive CT, it’s likely that you’ve already gotten wind of many of the news tidbits that trickle out of this industry: Plant expansions, new hires, project launches, milestones, mergers and acquisitions, etc.

Still, since the launch of CT, we’ve dutifully devoted several pages of each issue to a summary of the major news of the last two months, focusing on activity in the end-use sectors of the composites community. When CT was started 16 years ago, this made more sense than it does now. Today, an abundance of digital news delivery services makes the latest news instantly knowable.

Given the shift in the way our readers receive their news, we’re in the midst of a change that makes more sense today: We are letting the magazine do what it does best — in-depth coverage of the news behind the breaking news — and we’re letting our digital products do what they do best — provide speedy delivery of industry news as it breaks.

Over the next several issues, our printed news section will migrate away from providing a number of relatively short news stories to provide fewer but longer articles, each offering analysis and perspective on a select subject beyond the short, easy-to-digest version you likely will have seen elsewhere. This will enable us to focus in some depth on the biggest stories of the past two months, presenting you, the reader, with fresh data that will give you a more thorough understanding of significant events and their impact on the composites market.

For breaking news, we’ll direct you to two alternatives: The CompositesWorld Weekly e-newsletter and the CompositesWorld Web site’s Home Page.

The CW Weekly, distributed every Tuesday, provides a collection of the previous week’s news. There you’ll get all the news pertinent to the composites industry. It’s already e-mailed, for their convenience, to more than 25,000 composites professionals and is a reliable source for week-to-week developments in this community. (If you’re not a subscriber, visit www.compositesworld.com and click “Subscribe.”)

As the printed version of CT evolves to cover news events in greater depth, the CompositesWorld Home Page will similarly evolve to feature each days’ breaking news, before it is collected into the CW Weekly. So you’ll want to bookmark that page to keep breaking events just one click away.

Going forward, then, those who want to stay current with composites industry news can click in to our Web site for what’s breaking, receive the Weekly via e-mail for the weekly recap and await CT to reflect on the implications the big news has for the market you serve. And if you’re so inclined, I encourage you to find us on Facebook and Twitter as well.

Thanks for your interest, and no matter where you fall in the composites food chain, remember that you can help us report the same news you like to follow. Send word of your company’s location change, expansion, acquisition, new product, technical innovation, contract award, awards received or other happenings to us at pr@compositesworld.com.

Airtech
industrial CNC routers
Smart Tooling
Carbon Fiber 2024
CAMX 2024
3D industrial laser projection
HEATCON Composite Systems
KraussMaffei Metering Systems
CompositesWorld
NewStar Adhesives - Nautical Adhesives
CompositesWorld
Thermwood Corp.

Related Content

Editorial

Welcome to the Composites Age

The human race has a long history of developing materials, each one a little better than the one before it. Composites are among the latest in a long line, and proving highly adaptable to new opportunities.

Read More
Construction

Why aren't composites synonymous with infrastructure?

The U.S. seems poised to invest heavily in infrastructure. Can the composites industry rise to the occasion? 

Read More
Editorial

Up, not out: The next chapter of CompositesWorld

I have been editor-in-chief of CompositesWorld for 17 years, which translates into a lot of editorials. This will be my last as I become publisher of CW. We welcome Scott Francis back to the brand to take my place.

Read More
Editorial

What to make of the first JEC World in three years

CW went to JEC World 2022 not sure what to expect. We were pleasantly surprised, and learned much about where and how new composites technologies are being developed.

Read More

Read Next

Filament Winding

From the CW Archives: The tale of the thermoplastic cryotank

In 2006, guest columnist Bob Hartunian related the story of his efforts two decades prior, while at McDonnell Douglas, to develop a thermoplastic composite crytank for hydrogen storage. He learned a lot of lessons.

Read More
Pressure Vessels

Composites end markets: Energy (2024)

Composites are used widely in oil/gas, wind and other renewable energy applications. Despite market challenges, growth potential and innovation for composites continue.

Read More
Trends

CW’s 2024 Top Shops survey offers new approach to benchmarking

Respondents that complete the survey by April 30, 2024, have the chance to be recognized as an honoree.

Read More
Airtech International Inc.