Print circulations drop with many publications shedding 30% of readers

Print media continues to see its readership erode, with figures down for most major magazine and newspaper titles for the year ending 2011.

According to Roy Morgan Research’s readership survey, 98 magazines saw a decline in readership while only 26 clocked an increase and all major newspaper titles saw a year on year decrease, apart from mX and Saturday’s Australian Financial Review. The results mirror findings from the Australian Bureau of Circulations, released last week by The Newspaper Works, which showed falls for the final quarter of the year.

Commenting on the results, CEO of ACP Magazines, Matthew Stanton, found cause for optimism, pointing to 16 magazines that command half a million or more readers each issue despite the ongoing period of consumer caution and weak retail spending.

“Australia’s magazine industry has been remarkably resilient in this ongoing period of consumer caution and weak retail spending,” Stanton says.

“More than 5800 titles are sold on Australian newsstands. Given that range and choice, the fact that 16 Australian magazines enjoy half a million or more readers each issue proves the enduring relevance and importance of these magazine brands in people’s lives.”

ACP, which accounts for 44% of market share compared to Pacific Magazines’ 22% and News Magazines’ 12%, suffered falls on its titles Harper’s Bazaar (-13%), FHM (- 26.8%), Zoo Weekly (-19.4%), Picture (- 23.3%) and People (-22.3%).

However, many of its publications performed well with The Australian Women’s Weekly, SHOP Til You Drop, madison, GRAZIA, Australian Gourmet Traveller, Recipes+, Australian Geographic, Rolling Stone, Empire, 4X4 Australia, and Money registering increases.

Pacific Magazine’s women’s titles Who and Marie Claire both fell, by 14.1% and 19.4% respectively, to cap off disappointing results for the women’s category.

The men’s category fared even more poorly accounting for some of the biggest falls for the calendar year. NewsLifeMedia’s GQ  dropped 29.7%, down from 111,000 to 78,000 readers, and FHM, Zoo Weekly, Picture and People all took hits.

For newspapers, Roy Morgan’s year end results show declines to all but light interest title mX and the Australian Bureau of Circulation results show a decline of 3.9% overall for Monday to Saturday sales of national, metropolitan and regional papers for quarter four.

According to Roy Morgan data, Fairfax’s Monday to Saturday publications fared better than News Ltd. Its top three titles – Australian Financial Review, Sydney Morning Herald and The Age – shed a combined 129,000 readers, or 4% year-on-year, while News’ The Australian, Daily Telegraph and Herald Sun dropped 456,000, or 8%.

The Sunday papers also struggled, with News’ The Sunday Telegraph falling 51,000 from 1,478,000 to 1,427,000, while Fairfax’s The Sun-Herald dropped 44,000 from 1,108,000 to 1,064,000. In Victoria, News’ Sunday Herald-Sun fell from 689,000 to 673,000, while Fairfax’s Sunday Age fell from 689,000 to 673,000.

In Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory decreases of the same magnitude were experienced by all papers, except News’ mX in Queensland and Victoria.

mX rose by 32% in Queensland, up to 62,000, and by 12% in Victoria to reach 171,000, but fell by 14% in NSW, down to 132,000.

 

The future of… print

This feature first appeared in the December 2011/January 2012 issue of Marketing magazine.

 

As 2011 comes to an end, Marketing magazine decided to take a look at the most rapidly evolving channels. The pace of change across the industry made this a difficult decision, but the three we’ve analysed all share a common and ever evolving game-changer: technology.

In the third of our predictions trilogy, Marketing takes a look at print and  how publishers are deepening their audience engagement on advertiser’s behalf through multiple touchpoints.

Everyone loves a good headline, and despite the usual suspects newspapermen and magazine editors, no one moreso than the web-press and bloggers. Yes they move newspapers, but damn can you see your analytics tickers fly when you post something entitled, ‘The Death of Print’. Choir’s love to be preached to. The reality is that print is no more dying than the discipline of marketing is dying. Print media businesses are about building an audience and engaging them deeply on an emotional and/or intellectual level. The media used to do this evolves: formats expand and contract with demand. So, in response marketing to marketing demand, all media businesses are employing multiple touchpoints.  Before the internet there had never been such a macro shift combined with micro influences: delivering in-demand content formats (text, video, audio) more easily.

Recognise that the product of a print media business is not paper, it is content. Recognise that few brands can dream of the brand equity a masthead enjoys. Recognise we live in a time where to take any channel alone and analyse it as a sole medium for reaching consumers, rather than a part of an integrated campaign or communications strategy, is to determine the result before beginning.

At a time when media fragmentation has made audiences harder to reach:

  • the surviving traditional print businesses and the web startups alike have recognised offering an advertising solution that is a single touchpoint leads to insolvency, and
  • savvy marketers understand the engagement reputable mastheads offer over other paid media (including purchased databases).

The real figures

According to the Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC), like-for-like audited magazine sales in Australia fell by 5.5 percent between January and June 2011. According to Magazines Publishers of Australia (MPA) 230 million magazines are sold annually in Australia, although this data is an aggregate based on ABC data of 2009. Aggregate data indicating the split between B2B and B2C titles was not made available before time of press. The MPA claim eight of 10 people read at least one or more magazines, with popularity of the media skewing slightly towards women at 84 percent and 76 percent of men.

On the newspaper front, the total decline has been surprisingly lower – although more significant when viewed as unit sales. The statistics paint a brighter picture than the aforementioned sensationalist headlines would have us believe. Between 2010 and 2009, The Newspaper Works reported a decline of three percent for metro and national paid dailies, juxtaposed with a decline of five percent for US newspapers and seven percent for UK. This international divide in newspaper decline is not an isolated anomalous year, but an ongoing trend between the markets: between 2005 and 2009, Australian newspapers dropped 4 percent, while the US and UK category equivalents saw drastic drops of 13 and 16 percent respectively. The Newspaper Works explains the stark difference is due to serendipitous market conditions. It says Australia is advantaged in that most markets are serviced by a single metropolitan or regional daily, while in the US many markets see multiple metropolitan and regional dailies and the UK has a number of large national dailies in competition with one another.

The brand equity of newspaper mastheads is demonstrated when looking at the top 10 news sites in Australia: seven are owned by newspaper publishers, though pole position is Nine News published by ninemsn. Second and third place are held by Fairfax with the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age respectively, while News Limited holds fourth, fifth, seventh, eight and tenth place with news.com.au, Herald Sun, The Australian, thetelegraph.com.au and Courier Mail respectively. Positions six and nine are held internationally by Yahoo!7 and BBC News. PwC’s Entertainment and Media Outlook for 2011-2015 demonstrates the parochial effectiveness of digital newspapers, showing display advertising growth for Australian mastheads well ahead of their US counterparts at 236 percent between 2006 and 2010 versus just 55 percent for US mastheads. The same report anticipates by 2015, display advertising with digital newspapers will have grown to $440 million from $286 million in 2011.

What are publishers doing?

The internet has really left few industries untouched and in adversity is opportunity. Right Angle Studio is one of the hot young things in the publishing industry that’s taken advantage of media fragmentation and developed quite a divergent model and offering. Publishers of the popular Thousands City Guides (websites and eDMs named after capital city post codes), Right Angle Studio started as a collaboration between brothers Barry and Chris Barton and provides a signpost to where publishers big and small are moving.

“What we found out is that after a couple of years of producing content about cities for inner city people, brands were often coming to us to ask us for our insights into that audience, or to ask us to perform marketing services targeting that group,” Barry, strategy and insights director at Right Angle Studio, tells Marketing.

These insights and audience engagement have spawned several partnerships including:

  • Lost & Found Hotel: the physical extension of a digital magazine targeted at the Australian creative community. In partnership with Tourism Victoria, Right Angle Studio collaborates with creative Melburnians to create, design and furnish a pop-up hotel
  • The Thousands iPhone app: a city guide of the best food and entertainment in Australian cities, produced in partnership with American Express. The app is branded on opening and provides reinforcement through indicating which locations accept AmEx, and
  • The Pond: a 2009 partnership with Pure Blonde as the beer began moving in on the inner-urban market in which Right Angle Studio facilitated the rejuvenation of two dilapidated spaces in Sydney and Melbourne, where drinkers could exchange eco-friendly donations for pots of beer.

“Our focus as a business is on an urban demographic, and how we communicate with that urban demographic can take many forms. And so I guess when people look at Right Angle, it might seem a little confusing because we’re a company that has online publications and owns a cinema and produces events, and does a myriad of things. But for us, it makes perfect sense because we’re still speaking to the same group of people, and we have a very deep understanding of all the different ways in which they communicate.

Barton says that, on the contrary, one touchpoint simply doesn’t cut-through to an audience the way it once did and no longer works for either publishers or advertisers.

We discuss media fragmentation and declining physical readerships and Barton puts forward the idea that, “there has been this proliferation of titles and readership opportunities, and we seem to have gone through an almost kind of gluttonous period of media consumption where we’ve stuffed as many different titles into our repertoire as possible and been left with a lot of things for which we have very little empathy or feeling. And I think that, as quite a pervasive trend across society, not just in terms of the publications we consume, but the number of people in our social networks, is a general sort of consolidation and quality control that’s beginning to creep into our consideration of things. And it would be nice to presume that, as we go through this kind of threshing out of what still works for us and what doesn’t, that publications which are at a higher quality and have continually developed a good product will recapture old markets, or not share that market with as many other publications.”

It isn’t just the hot young things that are adapting to new advertiser demands in order to create deeper branded experiences. The titans of the industry are there too. In the magazine world, there’s really one masthead to rule them all: Vogue.

“Vogue’s circulation is above the 50,000 mark. It’s been there for many years, decades actually,” agrees Mark Kelly, group publisher, lifestyle, at News Magazines. “Vogue will have an increase at the next audit at June. Its readership is up 9.9 percent, and that’s added up with a trend over the last couple of years. I think the key point here, and the one that you’re raising, is that it’s increasingly important to look at the total audience for magazine brands, and that’s really because what we’re trying to look at is engagement, and you can’t only look at circulation or readership [to see that]. So, you really need to look at cross-circulation readership online, social media, and events such as Fashion’s Night Out to understand the engagement levels across all platforms. And just to that point, Vogue Australia has the second highest per capita audience of any Vogue in the world.” [The highest is not the expected French or Italian edition, but Spanish.] “So, our penetration is extremely high in Australia, and online, we’re the dominant fashion or lifestyle brand. So, an example of that is the new measurement system was released by Nielsen, and that shows a unique audience of nearly 500,000 people from vogue.com.au, but there is also a significantly large community audience for Vogue across social media platforms, Facebook, Twitter, the blog, Tumblr, and Vogue forums. Its digital footprint has really expanded exponentially over the last 12 months. So, combined social media audiences of over 300,000 people. Facebook alone is 45,000, and Tumblr has gone from 2000 to 14,000 in three months. So, that is not an unduplicated audience, obviously, but it is true that we’ve always thought about our magazines as more than just magazines and print products, but it’s becoming increasingly true that from an advertiser’s perspective, they want to know what the audience is and the level of engagement with that audience.”

In 2009 Anna Wintour, editor-in-chief of American Vogue, birthed the Vogue Fashion’s Night Out (FNO) amid the GFC. The idea was to put the fun back into shopping while reinvigorating a suffering retail sector. FNO draws shoppers to retail precincts for the ‘VIP style’ experiential activity retailers offer: champagne, street performances, fashion advice etc. In 2010 it came to our shores, lighting up Sydney. Kelly, tells me that following the success of 2010, 2011 saw significant participation growth on the retailer front as 600 came on-board from 400 in 2010. But even at that scale, Kelly suggests it’s closer to good will than gold mine:

“It was a very big investment from our business last year. It’s not a money making venture. Basically, we lend our expertise as the world’s most influential media fashion brand to the retailers, and then it’s up to the retailers, really, to activate within their stores. So, a lot of the prestige advertisers have international alignments, obviously, and the luxury advertisers – the Ballys, the Burberrys, etc. –  they’re doing it in other cities… What we do is work with them on that and advise – we get access to what is world’s best practice for Fashion’s Night Out from the 17 cities around the world that conduct it… Advertisers definitely support it in the magazine around the issue, and that was certainly one of our highest ever revenue issues. In fact, the September and October issues were consecutively the two highest revenue issues in the history of Vogue, 51 years. But that’s more that they’re choosing to amplify their message through the magazine. So, the infrastructure that we do put on is expensive… Westfield was a major sponsor and there was other sponsors as well that supported us, including the City of Sydney. But it’s not going to make the Vogue rich; it’s more about providing an opportunity for the retailers, building relationships with the retailers, and allowing a much broader church of people to touch Vogue.”

Digital Engagement

The meteoric adoption of tablet devices is obviously something publishers are viewing lasciviously and audience expansion through the channel presents an interesting future to publishers and deeply engaging touchpoint to advertisers. The recent iOS5 upgrade including  Apple’s Newsstand has produced heartening figures, with News Limited’s iPad only The Daily shooting to pole position in terms of sales, with 120,000 active weekly readers, 80,000 of which are paying subscribers. Conde Nast reported a 268 percent increase in digital subscriptions after the update and a 142 percent increase in single copy sales. At time of print there were 295 magazines distributing through Apple Newsstand. The dominant player, however, is Zinio rather than Apple. The world’s largest digital newsstand, and through which Marketing magazine is published digitally, offers over 4500 magazine titles across 20 currencies.

“I think that the presence of the Apple newsstand is fantastic,” says Kelly. “Certainly, it’s been an issue trying to find magazines, and we know that the tablet is used for lots of things, social media, emails, gaming, obviously reading as well. But the lack of one place where you can consolidate all the print brands has certainly been a problem, and now it’s there, and having a look at it looks pretty good to me. I think though that we don’t only want to have a relationship with people through Apple, because obviously they’re taking 30 percent of the cut, and there is still questions over who owns the data. We will be seeking to not only have a relationship with them through Apple, but also a direct relationship as well. And I think that may mean different pricing on different platforms, all those things we’re experimenting with at the moment.”

At time of print, The Washington Post had excited the publishing world with its collaboration with Facebook on the social reader app. The web app displays The Washington Post’s content within a Facebook frame. From a publisher’s point of view it’s a fantastic means to leverage audiences they may never be exposed to: the web app automatically shares with a Facebook user’s friends all articles read by the user. It also displays articles read by the users friends, encouraging them to view more content. It also tailors content for the user by scanning her profile for likes and interests. The play is quite beneficial to Facebook as it keeps the user in the social network’s ecosystem – and a senior digital strategist with one of the big five media groups predicted off-record this was the first clue of the “inevitable” Facebook web browser. This automatic sharing also benefits advertisers in reaching hidden demographics through a complex funnel of interest-related sharing that would’ve been unobtainable through traditional research or digital targeting. It’s a step towards un-siloing content from algorithms while ensuring audience engagement.

The future of print is bright and it’s precisely the technological schism providing the light. It’s deeper audience engagement for publishers and advertisers using existing expertise across multiple-platforms – hinged on the medium you’re holding in your hand.

 

This article is featured in the December/January issue of Marketing magazine.

Newspaper figures fall further

Figures released today by the Audit Bureau of Circulations show sales of Monday to Sunday metropolitan newspapers fell by 3% in the three months ending March, 2010, compared with the corresponding period in 2009.

However, the sector’s representative body, The Newspaper Works, assures advertisers that Australians continued to buy 20 million newspapers every week in the latest quarter, a figure which the body’s CEO, Tony Hale, has described as “very significant relative to the total Australian population”.

Between January and March 2009, major news events at home included the Victorian bushfires and the Federal Government’s household stimulus package in response to the GFC, added Hale.

Hale also cited the inauguration of US President Barack Obama produced a surge in newspaper sales in Australia.

“These three events generated enormous interest and helped drive newspaper sales. By contrast, the first three months of 2010 have not produced stories of the same magnitude and as a result we’ve seen, not surprisingly, slightly lower results,” Hale said.

Hale also pointed out that Australian newspapers were outperforming their US and UK, where sales of US weekday newspapers dropped by 8.7%, while in the UK, circulation in the same period fell 4.5%.

This comes following a report was released by the Bureau in November 2009 indicating that newspaper circulations had fallen 1.1%.

Newspaper numbers down but not out says Hale

Figures released by the Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) show sales of Monday to Sunday metropolitan daily newspapers were down by 1.6% in the three months ending December 2009.

Victorian weekend papers have gained some ground, with The Herald Sun Saturday edition and the Sunday Age recording modest growth.

However, national newspapers took some of the biggest hits, with the Australian Financial Review recording a 10% loss on both its weekly and Saturday offerings.

Of all Australia’s regional newspapers audited, only eight were able to announce growth figures.

Despite the figures, The Newspaper Works CEO Tony Hale, assured the media that the industry is showing signs of improved numbers.

“In the past decade, broadsheet publishers have continued to invest in production facilities, quality journalism, newspaper inserted magazines, new sections and a raft of other initiatives in order to stay relevant to readers and give them what they want. As a result, Australians are still buying printed broadsheets in virtually the same numbers as 10 years ago, which is remarkable in light of the changing media landscape and at a time when the doomsayers have been predicting the demise of newspapers thanks to the rise of the internet,” said Hale.

Hale pointed to sales trends in overseas markets as examples of how well the Australian market is doing in comparison, with weekday US newspaper sales dropping 10.6% and UK national daily newspaper sales falling by 3.1%.

In contrast, Australian sales of Monday to Saturday national, metropolitan and regional newspapers fell by 1.8%.

“Every week, Australians are still buying 15.2 million metropolitan newspapers – this is a phenomenal number in a country with a population as relatively small as ours,” explained Hale.

Circulations dissent loses support

Fairfax and Magazine Publishers of Australia have withdrawn support for a new readership metric.

The new metric, under development by The Newspaper Works, comes in response to dissent around Roy Morgans measurement and alleged lack of transparency.

The withdrawal coincides with the announcement of three research firms shortlisted for the project: GfK: Mediamark Research and Intelligence, Ipsos MediaCT and, TNS Australia. (Changed semi-colons to commas)

News Ltd supports The Newspaper Works system. Representing media buyers, Media Federation of Australia (MFA) chairman, Gary Hardwick said the MFA will continue to support the development through the tender process. If the new metric is demonstrably better, media buyers will support the transition.

Belinda Rowe, ZenithOptimedia managing partner, said only one system was likely to prevail:

We cant operate two systems in trading metrics and as an agency wed have to make a call on which one.

Id imagine if we felt the tender process resulted in a really strong measurement process then the MFA would absolutely want to get behind it, added Rowe.

Paper sales down despite industrys positive disposition

Australian newspaper sales have posted less than positive circulation results in figures released by the Audit Bureau of Circulations despite The Newspaper Works insisting that the results show they’re “defying newspaper sales trends overseas”.

Sales of Monday to Sunday metropolitan newspapers decreased 1.1% in the three months ending September 30, 2009, compared with the previous corresponding period, despite the figures indicating that Australians are buying more than 20 million newspapers every week.

Sales of national, metropolitan and regional Monday to Saturday Australian newspapers were also down by 1.3%, while metropolitan Sunday newspapers segment circulation was down 2.5%.

The Newspaper Works said that while there have been decreases in the Australia figures, they are “in sharp contrast to the latest circulation data from the US and UK”.

“Just as the Australian economy has proven more resilient than the rest of the world, so too have our newspapers. Newspapers in Australia continue to set the news agenda on a daily basis and Australians turn to newspapers as the most reliable news medium,” said The Newspaper Works CEO Tony Hale.

In the US market, weekday newspaper sales dropped by 10.6%, while Sunday newspapers fell by 7.5%. The circulation trend in the UK is also continuing downwards, with national daily newspaper sales in September this year falling by 3.9% year on year, and Sundays down by 6.3%.

In a similar study conducted by Roy Morgan on ‘Newspaper Readership after the Global Financial Crisis’, weekend papers and some dailies have managed to avoid the worst of the period, with The Australian and its weekend offering picking up extra sales.

The Roy Morgan research showed that though some papers increased and some decreased, “clearly this is a much better situation than is seen overseas and especially in the US”.

Australian newspapers performing well

Figures released by the Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) reveal Australian newspapers have remained in a strong position despite falls overseas.

The statistics indicate a stable result for the June 2009 quarter, with Australians buying more than 20 million newspapers every week.

The ABC said national Saturday newspaper sales had increased by 1.2% compared with the same period in 2008, while metropolitan Saturday newspapers remained stable despite a decline in advertising activity.

The figures indicated Monday to Friday metropolitan papers were relatively steady, with only a 0.1% decrease. The decline of Sunday newspapers has been arrested year on year, with 3.2 million sold per week.

Overall, the ABC statistics demonstrate year-on-year stability with sales down just 0.7%. Juxtaposed with US and UK sales, the figures suggest Australia appears to be in a strong position. The Audit Bureau of Circulations in the US and UK report declines of 7% and 4% respectively.

“The latest ABC circulation figures are further proof that newspapers are delivering what Australians want, namely products of value that continue to set the news agenda,” said Tony Hale, CEO of The Newspaper Works.

“These figures confirm the strength of Australian newspapers. The latest PWC Australian Media and Entertainment Outlook reported that newspapers in Australia are in a much stronger position than their international counterparts and will remain a viable business in the short, medium and longer term.”