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Research News South Africa

Print newspaper readership yielding to internet publishing

A recently released study looks at who reads their news in the newspaper - and why habits we acquired when younger, tend to stay with us.

According to the 2008 Readership Institute, Northwestern University tracking study of newspaper and online readership in 100 US communities, reported by Mary Nesbitt, Readership Behaviour Scores (calculated on a 1-7 scale) among the general adult population have averaged 3.4 over the last six years, with variations likely due, in whole or part, to seasonal variations.

With non-readers out of the mix, readers of the local daily newspaper registered a 4.7 score this year, a level that has actually risen slowly since the first measurement in 2002.

Key findings

Some of the key findings of the study are reported by the writer as follows:
• Readership among 18-24-year-olds in the general population continues to slowly decline; but the habit is fairly stable for 45-plus
• People who read newspapers say they spend, on average, 27 minutes with them on weekdays, and 57 minutes on Sundays. The first figure has stayed stable, but the latter figure has been slowly dropping since 2002
• Readers continue to engage with the newspaper, on average, more than five days a week
• On average they complete 60% of the paper on weekdays and 62% on Sundays, also stable habits says the write

Print newspaper readership yielding to internet publishing

The penetration of newspaper websites is still quite low in most communities, though it should be noted that only the main sites were measured, not related sites whose ownership consumers might not recognise.

Some 62% of respondents said they had never visited the local newspaper's Website, and only 14% said they had visited between the last seven to 30 days, numbers that have improved only a little over the last five years. The Site Usage Measurement (SUM) score for the general population is only 1.26 on a 1-7 scale. When non-users are removed from the sample, website users score 2.54.

Readers are more engaged with print than with the website, according to the report, with ratings for four experiences that are significantly higher for the newspaper than for the site:
• "Gives me something to talk about"
• "Looks out for my interests"
• "Ad usefulness"
• "Touches and inspires me"

The trends are clear, concludes the writer, that low-reading groups continue to take their low-reading habits with them as they age. The very youngest adults have media and news habits very different from their parents. For the first time in six years RBS scores are dropping among people who also look at the newspaper's Website.

Find additional information and the complete release here.

Article courtesy http://publications.mediapost.com/

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