Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries: The Newspaper Publishing Industry
Table 8: Advertising and circulation in global newspaper publishing market (US-$ millions)
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- Total newspapers 185592 186857 179320 159693 159746 % Change 0,7 -4,0 -10,9 0,0
- The Newspaper Publishing Industry 39
Table 8: Advertising and circulation in global newspaper publishing market (US-$ millions)
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Print advertising newspapers 111962 109732 100341 81525 80885 % Change -2,0 -8,6 -18,8 -0,8 Digital advertising newspapers 4127 5369 5842 5634 6404 % Change 30,1 8,8 -3,6 13,7 Circulation newspapers 69503 71756 73137 72534 72457 % Change 3,2 1,9 -0,8 -0,1 Total newspapers 185592 186857 179320 159693 159746 % Change 0,7 -4,0 -10,9 0,0 Source: PwC, 2011. The Newspaper Publishing Industry 39 In the first decade of the 21 st century, print remains the main revenue driver for newspaper publishers. 14 Digital advertising accounted for 2% of the spending on newspapers in 2005, rising only to 4% in 2009 (calculated from Table 8). Until now, the increase in online advertising and spending has not made up for loss in advertising and sales revenues from print for newspaper publishers. This issue has been referred to as the 10% problem (Karp, 2007). Karp illustrates this by comparing the readership of print newspapers (in circulation) with the online reach of their website (in unique visitors). The reach of its print newspaper represents roughly about 10% of the total audience reach, the other 90% comes from online reach of news (in unique visitors). With advertising income, the opposite is the case; online advertising revenue is worth 10% of total advertising revenue, the other 90% comes from print advertising. Karp (2007) offers an example based on New York Times statistics: on an average weekday in 2007, 1.1 million people read a paper copy of the New York Times. At the same time, the website of the newspaper is visited by 13.3 million people each day, i.e. 12 times as many. Analysing the advertising income, the opposite trend is visible. Karp states that total advertising revenue is approximately 484 million USD, and online advertising accounts for 51 million USD (10.5%) for the New York Times in 2007. The decline in print advertising can, for an important part, be attributed to the decline in classified advertising. In the United States in 2000, classifieds counted for almost 20 billion USD and 40% of total advertising revenues for newspapers (WAN IFRA, 2011). In 2009, the income from classifieds had fallen to just 6.2 billion USD. On the one hand, the companies publishing classifieds in newspapers experienced the effects of the economic crisis and thus spent less on advertising, and on the other hand, a large number of online substitutes for classified advertising (e.g. Craigslist) have been launched since approximately 2000 (Grueskin, Seave, & Graves, 2011). American research showed that in 2009 the number of adults with internet access who used online classified ads has more than doubled since 2005. Almost half (49%) of all American internet users say they have ever used online classified sites in 2009 (Jones, 2009). WAN-IFRA reports similar developments in European countries; in the UK classified ad revenue fell 45% year on year by 2009 and countries such as Switzerland and The Netherlands also reported half their classified revenues had migrated to online players (WAN IFRA, 2011). In response, a number of newspaper publishers have bought online services that offer classified ads; Norwegian publisher Schibsted for example has bought LeBonCoin, a French classifieds portal ( http://www.leboncoin.fr/ ) and Sanoma bought Autotrader, a Dutch website for buying and selling cars (www.autotrader.nl). Download 1.37 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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