Category Archives: Traffic

Traffic soars to Times Online blogs

Global page views of Times Online’s blogs rose past the 2.5 million mark in May this year, according to figures from the publisher – an increase of 500 per cent compared to May 2007.

The graph below shows the overall growth of its top performing blogs. Daniel Finkenstein’s Comment Central and Paris correspondent Charles Bremner’s Le Blogue are shown to perform consistently well, while The Game blog and Money Central (no doubt spurred by the recent economic downturn) have increased in popularity:

The site’s top 10 blogs in terms of global page views in May this year were:

    The Game Blog 562,835
    Money Central 552,941
    Comment Central 541,598
    Alpha Mummy 170,862
    Fanzine Fanzone 136,760
    Charles Bremner 114,884
    Formula 1 103,607
    Snakes and Ladders 94,202
    Mousetrap Technology 88,496
    Red Box 85,96

    As you can see the top three account for the majority of the blogs’ traffic. Figures for TimesOnline’s page views from May’s Audit Bureau of Circulations Electronic (ABCe) report suggest the site recorded 117,826,926 page impressions. These stats therefore suggest blogs accounted for roughly 2.12 per cent of the site’s total page views.

      Telegraph.co.uk redesign: engagement above traffic?

      Speaking at yesterday’s preview of the Telegraph.co.uk redesign, both chief information officer Paul Cheesbrough and digital editor Edward Roussel said the new site was aimed at ‘deeper engagement’ with users.

      Both declined to comment on whether the new site would bring success in terms of ABCe figures, even suggesting the amount of content/page views per user was more important at this stage than an increased numbers of visitors.

      “If we have doubled the amount of content that each person is consuming [by the end of the year] then that’s great,” said Roussel.

      The current average for the site is 16 page views per person per month, he added.

      A raft of improvements have been made in the new design to address the issue of engagement. Firstly improved search and navigation features to help users find the content they are after more quickly and keep them on the site.

      Changes to the site’s servers have also been implemented with a series of international servers set up so the experience of accessing the site is the same wherever you are, Cheesbrough explained.

      These changes were made necessary after ‘power outages’ on the site last year, which brought Telegraph.co.uk down for prolonged periods. In contrast the site is now the fastest news site behind the BBC, Cheesbrough claimed.

      One of the most significant changes for me – and the one which lends itself most immediately to both engagement and traffic goals – is an increase in embedded video.

      Following hot on the heels of the BBC and FT, who have both made the move to embedded video, the new Telegraph.co.uk will embed its video content within articles across the site and lose the standalone Telegraph TV player box on the homepage.

      The BBC’s Pete Clifton told Journalism.co.uk previously that the conversion rate – the number of people reading the text article and viewing the video footage – was around 40 per cent for embedded video and only 2 per cent when video was housed in a separate player.

      Initial trials of embedding on Telegraph.co.uk have produced similarly positive results, said Cheesbrough, with a 30 per cent conversion rate for embedded videos compared to a 3 per cent rate for Telegraph TV.

      It’s a logical progression that boosts views and keeps the user engaged for longer, and is part of what the team behind the Telegraph redesign refer to as ‘the concept of the article as the homepage’.

      This shows an awareness that the homepage is no longer the main point of entry – around half of the site’s traffic comes through aggregators. Putting as much effort into the design and accessibiilty of every page of your site, as most publications put into their homepage, could well be a winning strategy for both traffic and engagement.

      MediaGuardian: ABCe audits under review

      The Joint Industry Committee for Web Standards (JICWEBS) has completed the first stage of its review of how data is analysed by the Audit Bureau of Circulations Electronic (ABCe) in its audit of newspaper website traffic.

      One suggestion is to include all newspaper domains that contribute to the monthly traffic figures in the ABCe reports.

      The review is ongoing with further reports expected in November.

      Telegraph.co.uk inserting keywords to drive traffic?

      Simon Collister has blogged about Telegraph.co.uk’s rising web traffic making it into this month’s Private Eye.

      The Eye apparently writes:

      “[Telegraph] news hacks are sent a memo three or four times a day from the website boffins listing the top subjects being searched in the last few hours on Google. They are then expected to write stories accordingly and/or get as many of those key words into the first par of their story.”

      (Shades of the England football team inserting song lyrics into post-match interviews under Glen Hoddle…)

      As this appears in Private Eye the usual caveats apply, but similar practices at the Telegraph have been suggested by the Observer’s media diary:

      “The Daily Telegraph has been accused of inserting keywords into copy to ensure its website gets the maximum number of hits, so it was interesting to see the following comment on telegraph.co.uk, posted in response to a rather dry piece about civil liberties penned by advertising guru Maurice Saatchi. ‘Dear Mr Saatchi,’ it began. ‘Your sister-in-law [ie Nigella Lawson] is second only to Holly Willoughby in my affections.’ You may wonder what the photogenic TV star has to do with 42-day detention periods, but it can’t harm the traffic figures.”

      Is the Eye onto something or is this just another Guardian-Telegraph conspiracy theory?

      Guardian: Mail’s traffic rise reopens questions about target audiences

      Mail Online last week became the UK national newspaper website receiving the most monthly unique users.

      But it gets a lower percentage of its user from the UK than any of the other newspaper websites so says the Media Guardian – gleaning a load of traffic from international celeb news and matching itself against other sites that aren’t just UK newspaper afilliations.

      Martin Clarke, Mail Online’s editorial director, told the Guardian: “We’re used to measuring against [other newspapers], but I’m as interested in what Google News, the BBC, or Sky is doing,”

      Does this render the ABCe measurement of newspaper against newspaper redundent? As newspapers will be matching different parts of their website against other specialist publications.

      Editor and Publisher: Top US News sites beat Google News for traffic

      Several newspaper networks surpassed Google News and achieved more unique traffic in May, according to new data from Nielsen Online.

      Editor and Publisher reported that NYTimes.com stood out with 21.3 million unique visitors while Google News gleaned 11.3 million monthly visitors.

      Tribune Newspapers and Gannett Newspapers, taken as groups, beat the online behemoth as well.

      Yahoo News was the number one current events and global news destination in May with a unique audience of 35.8 million.

      Shropshire Star posts 59% rise in page impressions

      The Shropshire Star recorded 1,630,103 page impressions in April, according to the latest figures from the Audit Bureau of Circulations Electronic (ABCe).

      The figure rose by 59 per cent from the last audit of the site in November 2007 and 103 per cent year-on-year.
      In April the site attracted 114,388 unique users – a 14 per cent increase over the five months from November.

      On average the site recorded 6,942 unique users and 54,337 page impressions per day.

      According to a release from publisher Midland News Association (MNA), the figures coincided with ‘a bumper harvest’ of user-generated content on the site following sudden snowfall in the county.

      BBC’s international news sites attract 13m weekly unique users

      The BBC’s international-facing news websites, which include bbcnews.com and bbcworldservice.co.uk, attracted 13 million weekly unique users during 2007-8, a press release from the corporation has said.

      According to independent surveys, the audience for all of the Beeb’s international news services was more than 233 million a week over the same period.

      The figure rose by by 23 million from 211 million two years ago.

      WAN 2008: Le Figaro: 20% of revenues from online by 2010

      Le Figaro is predicting that 20% of its revenue will be generated by its online operations by 2010.

      But the French newspaper has plans to beat this, Pierre Conte, deputy managing director for new media and advertising for Le Figaro Group, told delegates at the World Association of Newspapers (WAN) conference today.

      After rising from 2 million unique users to its websites to 8 million in two years, the group’s web traffic now accounts for 1 French internet user out of every four.

      Last year its online revenues accounted for 13% of its total income – so how will the publisher build on this?

      Gradual integration
      Online success will only be achieved if all the group’s editorial teams want to take part, Francis Morel, managing director, said.

      As such Le Figaro adopted an ‘invite not assign’ policy, giving journalists the opportunity to do work for the websites if they wished (though initially for no extra pay).

      According to Morel merging editorial teams for print and online was seen as essential, despite concerns raised by the unions.

      Journalists became increasingly enthusiastic about working for the websites and now both editorial teams are on the same floor under the same editorial head, though Morel insists this has been about building bridges and not enforced integration.

      Advertising
      The group has sought to recoup floundering revenues from print classifieds by making a concerted push with this advertising online, setting up a team to find advertisers for online-only.

      Contextual and behavioural advertising is also being experimented with.

      E-commerce and diversification
      Building around the flagship portal of Le Figaro, the publisher has launched specialist sport, finance and lifestyle websites, in addition to acquiring several e-commerce sites.

      Content has also been syndicated to other websites, though this is not a long-term business model, Conte says.

      “This business [selling content to other websites] will continue to be weak and limited. We need to work on ad revenue. We are not reinventing anything by saying that, but we need to integrate our sales house.”

      Content
      News remains a priority online for all the group’s content-based websites. On the Le Figaro site a commenting function has been added to articles and submissions from users are welcomed.

      Le Figaro has also set up its own TV studio to produce video clips for online and mobile.

      As a word of warning, Morel stresses that the digital developments in these areas have not been at the expense of the print product.

      “It is indispensable to continue to invest and focus on print, because while the internet is a key territory, it will not replace print.

      “We need to be extremely cautious and prudent. The internet is a very volatile market. We need to be very flexible at any time to change our course because we do not know what tomorrow holds.”