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Wednesday, November 07, 2012

Newspapers failing to diversify digital audience

Though newspapers have been pretty good over the years at growing traffic on their websites, they are shockingly bad at capitalizing on the social power of the digital media to broaden their audiences.

Audience diversification is important, because the typical newspaper website is read, more or less, by the same senior citizens who take the print paper. Here’s how serious the demographic challenge is: 

Using data from the Census Bureau and the Pew Research Center for People and the Press, I calculated a couple of years ago that at least half the audience at the typical newspaper is no less than 50 years old, because publishers are not attracting younger readers. 

Today, “the average print reader is a female nearing 60, when the average age of the national population is 43,” says Greg Harmon of Borrell Associates, who has been tracking readership trends for more than a decade. “The user of a newspaper website is a little less female than the print subscriber and just over 50 years old. Our research shows that print and web readers are basically the same people – and that the average age of the online newspaper audience keeps getting one year older every year.” 

As the core newspaper audience ages to perfection (and beyond), a proliferation of faster, better and cheaper digital devices is cutting into the appetite for print among consumers of all ages. 

In a poll released earlier this year, the Pew Research Center for People and the Press found that only 20% of Americans look to their local newspapers for campaign news vs. 40% as recently as 2000.  In a separate survey a year ago, Pew found that the early adopters of tablet computers were not twenty-something hipsters who abhor print, but, rather, the same sort of mature, highly educated and high-income individuals who traditionally read newspapers. 

Given the profound demographic and cultural forces challenging newspapers, how are publishers doing at diversifying their audiences via the social power of the digital media to build audience and community?  Just awful. 

Here’s how we know:

In a study completed in September, professor Rich Gordon of Northwestern University crawled the 300 largest news-oriented sites in the Chicago area to determine who linked to whom.  

Analyzing the results, he found that 81.7% of the links generating traffic for sites associated with the Chicago Tribune came from within the newspaper’s family of sites and that 80.4% of the link-driven traffic at the Sun-Times Media Group came from its corporate cousins. To be fair, newspapers were not the only large sites gaining the bulk of their link-driven traffic by steering existing readers from place to place on their own sites. As but one example, 91.7% of the link-driven traffic at Patch sites came from other Patch sites. 

Turning to the question of how well the Chicago news sites used the social media to build traffic, Gordon found that small websites – which cannot hope to benefit from the legacy readership enjoyed by the large sites – are much better than the big guys at leveraging Facebook to build and diversify their traffic.  

Whereas the smallest news sites in the survey drew 48.1% of their traffic from links on Facebook, the newspapers and other big sites got only 14.5% of their in-bound traffic from Facebook.  On the other hand, the big properties benefitted slightly more than the small ones from Twitter links to their sites. Gordon found that Twitter was responsible for 4.2% of big-site links and 3.6% of small-site links.

While there’s nothing wrong with using internal links to illuminate readers and expand advertising inventory, the heavy reliance on self-referential readership means that newspapers are not expanding beyond their core audience to capture younger readers. As print inexorably wanes, the lack of differentiation in the digital audience will be an obvious impediment to publishers seeking to sustain their relevance, readership and revenues in the digital age. 

One way for newspapers to broaden their base is to be far more avid about aggregating and linking to third-party content than they have been to date. While these practices seem to be anathema to many journalists and publishers, they not only enrich a website’s content offerings but also have the side benefit of encouraging third parties to link more generously to publishers. 

We know publishers can do this. The Chicago Tribune created ChicagoNow.Com to aggregate content from dozens of local bloggers covering everything from politics to pancakes.  But ChicagoNow lives on its own pages and merits only a modest link on the flagship website. This isolation not only keeps bunches of interesting stuff off the main Tribune site but also cuts the odds that the followers of the third-party content will see – and engage with – the Tribune’s valuable, staff-produced content.  

A tentative approach to social publishing won’t work. If publishers don’t go all in, there’s great danger they will be left out.

© Editor & Publisher

7 comments:

  1. Great article. Thanks. I can use this as defense exhibit A.

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  2. Then you have to consider that the subscription based paywalls -- often described as an attempt to outreach to the digitally savvy younger folks -- are contributing to the problem. The NYT or the Economist will not comment on this issue, but there is some evidence that papers with paywalls have seen an increase in the average age of their readers -- in one example to 59 yrs.

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  3. Then you have to consider that the subscription based paywalls -- often described as an attempt to outreach to the digitally savvy younger folks -- are contributing to the problem. The NYT or the Economist will not comment on this issue, but there is some evidence that papers with paywalls have seen an increase in the average age of their readers -- in one example to 59 yrs.

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  4. Great post, as always, Alan. :)
    However, I do think you should take a look at the Bonnier Corporation's new strategy which in my eyes is somewhat of a revolution.
    Instead of continuing on the traffic-and-click-strategies, they go back to basics.
    Visibility is what mattered - and they're assumption is that it still does. So instead of leading the eyeballs away, they are trying to keep them, in order to enhance visibility.
    Don't miss @stroemberg brilliant blog post about it here:
    http://fredrikstromberg.se/2012/10/10/media-sites-are-broken-and-must-be-fixed/

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  5. It's post-election and this is eerily similar to what the Republican party needs to do--expand their base and especially with the 18-35 demographic.

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  6. Right on Alan. And this means adding the bells and whistles and younger-skewed content to enhance what are becoming a lot of really stodgy web sites.It's not rocket science. BTW--This is eerily similar to what he Republican Party also needs to do...expand your base.

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  7. Another important reason for the cross linking is SEO.

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