JayFarrar
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Fascination study, with some breathtaking numbers, out from UT-Austin.
Journalism professor there took a look at circulation, both digital and print, at 20 metro papers and, LORDY!
There's some success buried in there, most notably the Boston Globe and the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, but it is mostly depressing.
For example, the most swinging-deck paper of the 80s and 90s I'm familiar with was the Miami Herald. Name-brand columnists, huge staff, deep bench and bureaus all around the world.
In the third quarter of 2020, the Herald had 23,306 digital subscribers. Okay, that seems not great but hardly shabby when you look deeper and see that number is double what it was in 2019.
Now, lets look at print subscriptions.
28,829
That's down from 33,896 in 2019.
There's only three papers -- LA Times, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Newsday -- with print circulations over 100,000.
And since 2019, those 20 papers have lost 347,241 print subscribers but gained 321,738 digital subscriptions.
One paper has digital subscriptions over 200,000 in the Globe with 229,027, and the Star-Tribune and Buffalo News are both 100,000.
The point of the study though, was on average, it takes six digital subscribers to match the circulation revenue generated from one print subscription. And never mind the difference in advertising revenue, where print ad money makes digital look like a rounding error.
The Impact of Covid-19 on 20 U.S. Newspapers' Print and Digital Circulation | Iris Chyi
Journalism professor there took a look at circulation, both digital and print, at 20 metro papers and, LORDY!
There's some success buried in there, most notably the Boston Globe and the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, but it is mostly depressing.
For example, the most swinging-deck paper of the 80s and 90s I'm familiar with was the Miami Herald. Name-brand columnists, huge staff, deep bench and bureaus all around the world.
In the third quarter of 2020, the Herald had 23,306 digital subscribers. Okay, that seems not great but hardly shabby when you look deeper and see that number is double what it was in 2019.
Now, lets look at print subscriptions.
28,829
That's down from 33,896 in 2019.
There's only three papers -- LA Times, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Newsday -- with print circulations over 100,000.
And since 2019, those 20 papers have lost 347,241 print subscribers but gained 321,738 digital subscriptions.
One paper has digital subscriptions over 200,000 in the Globe with 229,027, and the Star-Tribune and Buffalo News are both 100,000.
The point of the study though, was on average, it takes six digital subscribers to match the circulation revenue generated from one print subscription. And never mind the difference in advertising revenue, where print ad money makes digital look like a rounding error.
The Impact of Covid-19 on 20 U.S. Newspapers' Print and Digital Circulation | Iris Chyi