Tag Archives: us

Mixed fortunes for top US newspapers in November traffic figures

Mixed results for US newspaper websites a year on from the traffic surge generated by the US presidential race, according to Nielsen Online figures reported by Editor & Publisher.

The stats suggest that readers of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution spent 12 minutes more on its site in November 2009 when compared with the same period last year.

Half of the top 30 websites recorded a year-on-year increase in average user time spent on site, with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution posting the highest average time for the month at 23 minutes and 38 seconds.

But the New York Times’ website recorded the biggest year-on-year decrease in average time spent on the site by users. The figures suggest a drop of more than 19 minutes in the past year to a time of 17 minutes 17 seconds for November 2009.

Related reading on Journalism.co.uk: See the UK’s national newspaper websites’ traffic report for November from the Audit Bureau of Circulations Electronic (ABCe)

BuzzMachine: Opportunities for newspapers facing bankruptcy

In response to the Associated Press’ announcement that six US newspaper companies have declared bankruptcy, Jeff Jarvis suggests some experiments that these firms could still carry out to help reverse their fortunes:

  • staying in print, but splitting up the functions of the company and outsourcing everything possible;
  • investing in a widely distributed network of independent local and interest sites with the company adding value with curation and sales;
  • creating a pure ad network;
  • creating a very high quality product and – yes – charging a lot for it;
  • creating a series of special-interest niche services and, in some cases, publications;
  • creating the still mostly free, but higher value Craigslist with more curation for quality and more services;
  • experimenting with new services for local merchants – especially those too small to ever have afforded big, inefficient newspapers – including helping them succeed through Google, Yelp, et al;
  • creating citizen sales forces to scale while serving those small merchants.

Full post at this link…

Bits Blog: Traffic patterns visualised at the New York Times

Fascinating videos from the New York Times exploring where geographically-speaking traffic to its website comes from and what kinds of devices are being used to access it.

Explains Nick Bilton on the NYTimes’ Bits Blog:

The top video represents readers coming to the website from the United States. The second video shows a map of our global readers. The circles indicate two things. First, the yellow circles represent readers coming to the main website from desktop or laptop computers, and the orange circles indicate readers using mobile phones to access our mobile site. Second, the size of the circles represents the number of readers at that moment in time. You can see the corresponding time stamp in the upper left corner of the videos.

The videos show the traffic patterns for 25 June 2009 – the day news broke of Michael Jackson’s death:

The New York Times site traffic, US, June 25, 2009 from Nick Bilton on Vimeo.

The New York Times site traffic, World View, June 25, 2009 from Nick Bilton on Vimeo.

Politico: US local papers to syndicate fact-checking site PolitiFact

PolitiFact, the fact-checking website developed by US paper the St Petersburg Times and used during last year’s US presidential campaigns, will reportedly announce a major syndication deal with local newspapers.

The Pulitzer-prize winning site uses reporters and editors from the Times to fact-check statements made by senior politicians, lobbyists and interest groups in the US and rank the on a Truth-O-Meter. Barack Obama’s campaign promises are also being measured.

Full story at this link…

Poynter: Nielsen to sell Mediaweek in US; closing Editor&Publisher

A long-term source of editor’s picks for this blog, US trade publication Editor&Publisher is being axed by parent company Nielsen Business Media.

The sale of the title, which provided industry news on the newspaper and newsmedia industry, will be accompanied by the sale of eight brands from the group’s media and entertainment division, including Adweek, Brandweek and Mediaweek.

Full story at this link…

Also Steve Outing, regular columnist for Editor & Publisher: Farewell, Editor & Publisher (We all knew this day would come); and also reports of support from the industry – but is it enough to rescue the title?

Reuters: Washington Post closes US bureaux

The Washington Post has announced the closure of three of its US bureaux, in Chicago, Los Angeles and New York, to focus its resources and ‘journalistic firepower’ on reporting from Washington.

Full story at this link…

According to the BBC’s report on the closure, six correspondents from the bureaux will keep their positions, but three news aides have lost jobs.

WSJ: Vogue uses Obama’s digital fundraiser for revenue ideas

Interesting detail from the Wall Street Journal about Vogue’s use of Blue State Digital, the firm behind Barack Obama’s online presidential campaigning strategy.

The company has been taken on by Vogue to help the title analyse its audience as part of a push towards charging for online content on Vogue.com.

Full story at this link…

Editor&Publisher: Ohio newspapers to publish joint reporting project

A group of newspapers in Ohio, which last year joined forces to share content and ditch the Associated Press, is preparing to publishing its first joint reporting project next week.

According to last week’s report from Editor&Publisher, at least one reporter from each of the seven papers involved has been committed to the story on public employee pensions. Each paper has contributed examples from its area of the state and will run a main piece alongside local content specific to its region.

Full story at this link…

STL Social Media Guy: Web comment on newspaper site loses man his job

A ‘vulgar’ comment from a man on the St Louis-Post’s Dispatch website, STLtoday.com, resulted in him resigning from his job.

Kurt Greenbaum, online news director and director of social media at the paper, explains how he twice deleted the comment.

“[I then] noticed in the WordPress e-mail that his comment had come from an IP address at a local school. So I called the school. They were happy to have me forward the e-mail, though I wasn’t sure what they’d be able to do with the meager information it included,” explains Greenbaum.

“About six hours later, I heard from the school’s headmaster. The school’s IT director took a shine to the challenge. Long story short: Using the time-frame of the comments, our website location and the IP addresses in the WordPress e-mail, he tracked it back to a specific computer. The headmaster confronted the employee, who resigned on the spot.”

Full post at this link…

But as the site Awful Marketing asks, is this a violation of trust or a newspaper’s privacy policy?

Mediaweek: Current TV cuts 80 staff across global offices

Current TV, the cable channel backed by former US vice president Al Gore, is to cut 80 full-time positions as part of a restructuring.

Jobs will be lost in Current’s Los Angeles, San Francisco and London offices. But Current says the cuts are not down to cost-cutting, but part of a ‘reallocation of resources’ and change to its programming, including more long-form programmes and bought-in content.

Full story at this link…