The Fissures Are Growing for Papers

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By  on The New York Times, July 8  – 

While the rest of us were burning hot dogs on the grill last week, the newspaper industry seemed to be lighting itself on fire.

There have been cracks in publishing operations that are both hilarious and terrifying. The Times-Tribune in Scranton, Pa., published a box score for a baseball game that was never played, after one of the coaches made up a result to spare the other team the embarrassment of a forfeit.

The U-T, the daily newspaper of San Diego, published a two-week-old blog post — on its front page. And most notoriously, “This American Life” revealed that Journatic, a content farm owned in part by the Tribune Company that produces local articles on the cheap, was using fake bylines. Some of those hyperlocal pieces, which ran in newspapers like The Chicago Tribune, The Chicago Sun-Times, The Houston Chronicle and The San Francisco Chronicle, were written in the Philippines.

 

Read the full article on The New York Times

Mobile traffic to newspaper websites increases 65 percent in past year

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The Newspaper Association of America posted a press release yesterday about the increase in mobile traffic to newspaper websites. The NAA had this to say in their release:

“Newspaper publishers increased page views to their mobile content by 65 percent on average in September compared to the same month one year ago, according to the Newspaper Association of America. Many newspapers reported triple-digit page view increases to their mobile sites and apps, demonstrating that newspaper content remains a leading choice for consumers across their multiplatform offerings.

“NAA’s analysis is based on traffic figures for more than 20 newspaper media companies – large and small, public and private – that supplied year-over-year internal measurements of mobile page view traffic and unique visitors from September 2010 and September 2011. Unique visitor count increases ranged as high as 200 percent, with an average increase of about 70 percent for the publishers reporting.

You can read the full press release on the NAA website here

World Press Trends: Newspapers Still Reach More Than Internet

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By Larry Kilman on WAN-IFRA, Oct. 12, 2011

Newspaper circulation declined in print world-wide last year but was more than made up by an increase in digital audiences, the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers (WAN-IFRA) said Thursday in its annual update of world press trends.

“Circulation is like the sun. It continues to rise in the East and decline in the West,” said Christoph Riess, CEO of WAN-IFRA, who presented the annual survey Thursday at the World Newspaper Congress and World Editors Forum in Vienna, Austria.

The survey found:

  • Media consumption patterns vary widely across the globe. Print circulation is increasing in Asia, but declining in mature markets in the West.
  • The number of titles globally is consolidating.
  • The main decline is in free dailies. “For free dailies, the hype is over,” said Mr Riess.
  • For advertisers, newspapers are more time efficient and effective than other media.
  • Newspapers reach more people than the internet. On a typical day newspapers reach 20 percent more people world-wide than the internet reaches, ever.
  • Digital advertising revenues are not compensating for the ad revenues lost to print.
  • Social media are changing the concept and process of content gathering and dissemination. But the revenue model for news companies, in the social media arena, remains hard to find.
  • The business of news publishing has become one of constant updating, of monitoring, distilling and repacking information.
  • The new digital business is not the traditional newspaper business.

Read the full article on WAN-IFRA

 

 

From the LA Times – On the Media: No paper might mean no news

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By James Rainey on Latimes.com, Sept. 28, 2011 – Want to get under a newspaper person’s skin? Tell them you don’t need their work because you get most of your news from the Internet.

Inky survivors can’t stand to hear that because they know that — technological advances and upstart websites notwithstanding — the bulk of news on the Web actually still originates with newspaper reporters.

But it turns out that the audience doesn’t merely fail to recognize who produces most local news. Even those who do give credit to their local paper don’t express particular concern about finding an alternative if their paper goes away, a new and detailed survey of community news consumption habits shows.

Americans turn to their newspapers (and attendant websites) on more topics than any other local news source, according to a survey released this week by the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism. But, despite their own reading habits, more than two-thirds told pollsters that if their hometown paper disappeared, it would not seriously hurt their ability to keep up with the news.

Read the full article on the LA Times

 

 

Associated Press Teams With 40 Newspapers On Mobile Coupons

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By  on Paid Content, Sept. 18 –  With newspapers having suffered through 20 straight quarters of decline — and no end in sight — a collaborative effort on the part of the Associated Press and 40 newspapers is designed to play on two of the industry’s last advertising strengths: digital and pre-print circulars.

The new mobile initiative, dubbed “iCircular,” will start rolling out on Monday within the mobile sites and apps of the 40 newspapers.

The iCircular feature will be found within newspaper mobile apps on the iPhone. The feature will be available on other formats, such as Google’s Android, later on. It’s HTM5-based, so that will also be available on newspapers’ web and mobile wap sites and ultimately ease iCircular’s transfer to other operating systems. The app will be situated within a special “Deals” section on each of the newspapers’ apps and mobile sites.

Read the full article on Paid Content

Book Review – War at the Wall Street Journal: Inside the Struggle to Control an American Business Empire

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War at the Wall Street Journal: Inside the Struggle to Control an American Business Empire. Sarah Ellison. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Inc., 2010. 274 pp.

The sale of the Wall Street Journal in 2007 was a major news event, and rightly so. After all, the newspaper had (and still has) the largest circulation of any daily newspaper in the United States. Founded in 1889, it soon came to be recognized as the nation’s preeminent business publication. When it was sold by the Bancroft family, which held a controlling interest, the buyer was perhaps the best-known and most controversial figure in modern journalism: Rupert Murdoch, the owner of global media giant News Corporation. Many of the circumstances surrounding the sale only added to the story’s appeal.

[Read more...]

Web Advertising Exceeds Newspaper Print Ads

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From Bloomberg: Digital advertising in the U.S. will exceed ads in newspapers for the first time in 2010, as marketers follow consumers online and digital messages are viewed as more reliable than print. [Read more...]

Curley: Newspapers Now Provide Only 20 Percent of AP Revenue

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Revenues from newspapers have fallen by about one-third at the Associated Press since 2008, from $220 million a year to about $140 million in 2010, and now make up just over 20 percent of the organization’s total revenue. From Poynter.org

Journalism students don’t read newspapers

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From Guardian.co.uk — Greenslade Blog. Two eye-opening moments at my lecture to about 250 City University MA journalism students yesterday afternoon.

I asked for a show of hands on a simple question: what is your primary news source? Read more.

Smartphones bring mixed blessings for newspapers

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From guardian.co.uk: The growing popularity of smartphones is proving a double-edged sword for newspaper publishers, [Read more...]