Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries: The Newspaper Publishing Industry
Figure 13: Total average circulation free dailies 92,005 - 2009
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newspaper publishing industry jrc69881
Figure 13: Total average circulation free dailies 92,005 - 2009
Source: TNO based on WAN-IFRA data, 2010. The Newspaper Publishing Industry 47 2.4.3 Digital online and mobile technologies In the following paragraph some of the activities of newspaper publishers in the digital domain will be discussed, in some cases also comparing the activities of newspaper publishers with those of other and ‘internet-only’ news providers. Online news providers (traditional news) Around 1980, the internet offered a new strategic challenge to newspaper publishers and a new platform for news publishing. From 1980 on, newspapers (of which the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal were the first) offered their news online (at first in online databases, later on newspaper websites and news portals). According to Boczkowski (2005), around 1995 newspapers relied on the internet as their preferred non-print publishing environment; in 1998 more than 750 American newspapers offered their news on websites (Boczkowski, 2005) and in 2000 this number was up to 1207 (WAN IFRA, 2011); a 37% growth. Between 2003 and 2007, the number of online newspaper websites grew 51%. From 2006 to 2007 this growth percentage was almost 14% (WAN IFRA, 2008). Online, newspapers reprinted original content from the paper, increased their usefulness by adding related (multimedia) content and published new content as well (for example continuing updates of news stories). At the same time, these developments also enabled other news producers (like broadcasters and ICT companies) to extend their production online, diversifying the competitive field in the news sector. Broadcasting corporations, ICT companies and internet-only news providers now increasingly compete with newspaper publishers for online advertisers and audiences. Newspaper publishers have experimented with different ways of expanding their news service to the online domain. The Guardian (UK) for instance is known for its innovative use of online possibilities. On the website of the Guardian, users can read (newspaper) articles, but they can also access additional content such as blogs. In addition, The Guardian offers extensive opportunities for interaction; users can create and save clippings for later use or send content to others. The Guardian offers its users insight into the trending topics by displaying Zeitgeist, a new way to reveal and disclose news based on 'social signs' of Guardian users. 19 Zeitgeist displays a dynamic visual record of what people find interesting on the website of the Guardian. Another success story is Der Spiegel. This leading German newspaper has an independent web edition with 60 journalists working for it and 5.6 million unique visitors per month, who have little overlap with the print readership. The Der Spiegel website is said to have been profitable since 2005 (Esser & Brüggemann, 2010). One of the best known French online news services is Rue89, founded by former editors from the French newspaper Libération in 2007. Newspaper publishers have not only used the internet as a new platform for publishing news, but have also used internet tools such as email and RSS to alert people to news. RSS feeds make the websites of newspapers accessible by crawlers to aggregate content automatically. By providing RSS feeds to their websites, news publishers enable users to automatically keep up-to-date with new articles on their website. Thus, a reader does not have to visit the news website to check whether a story has been updated or a new article has been published. This has, on the one hand, facilitated the news consumption process. But on the other hand, by offering RSS feeds, newspaper publishers have paved the way for aggregation websites like Google News and applications like Flipboard, Pulse, Zite and Instapaper to aggregate and display content, and thereby distracting readers from their own websites (Filloux, 2011). 19 http://www.guardian.co.uk/zeitgeist |
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