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Do We Spend Much Time Reading Newspapers? According To A New UK Study We Sure Do

One of the many questions about print that advertisers have always asked is whether people actually spend much time reading their favorite newspaper, or is it just a quick skim? According to a new UK readership study apparently we spend far more time reading newspapers than perception dictates.

reading newspaperAnd the readership trend seems to fit the mold that the larger the newspaper content, the longer the read. Thus the average reader to the UK’s multi-section serious quality broadsheet Sunday Times  spent 102 minutes reading that newspaper whereas for its sister tabloid News of The World it is less than half at 45 minutes.

The UK’s National Reader Survey is a non-profit-making but commercial organization that the industry – publishers, advertisers, agencies – accept on an industry-wide basis as providing reliable estimates on a publication’s readership numbers, their demographics in terms of sex, age, where they live, and other such information. It uses interview methodology and its research is used in the planning, buying and selling of advertising space in print media.

This was the first time the survey reported on time reading print. “There has been for many years a mistaken assumption that all we are reading for is two minutes – a drive-by read, said Roger Pratt, the NRS managing director. “This data shows that this is absolutely not the case. People do spend considerable amounts of time of their day reading newspapers.”

This flies somewhat in the face of perceived wisdom that says with so many media channels now available that people don’t spend much time with print any more. “The time spent reading element to the survey reveals just how robust the print medium is. This first data set demonstrates that consumers are committing substantial time to print media despite increasingly busy lifestyles and the proliferation of media channels, “Pratt said.

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On average readers spent 40 minutes with their daily newspaper, 60 minutes with the Saturday paper which in the UK more and more resembles the multi-section Sunday newspapers, and the Sunday newspapers themselves are read an average 70 minutes. All with the same general rule, the more information a newspaper carries, the longer the read.

This all comes at an interesting time for the industry trying to figure out the proper resource relationship between print and digital. Many newspapers are diverting editorial resources to the online product but this survey shows that those who do still buy newspapers are willing to spend quite some time reading them, assuming it fulfills their needs. And that has to be something that advertisers will find important.

In the UK the time spent reading figures are significant because the latest ABC data shows that daily circulation has dropped 1.5% year-on-year and Sunday circulation has fallen 2.4%. But now in the face of those negative numbers publishers can emphasize a positive – those who are staying with newspapers really do read them quite thoroughly.

The survey didn’t deal with the readership time  for free newspapers, although it doesn’t take too much to figure out that their time numbers must be quite a bit lower  than the paid-fors, judging by the tons of free newspapers discarded on the streets and public transport every day. You don’t see many paid-fors in that trash pile. That point, also,  should not be lost on advertisers.

Since this was the first UK study of its kind,  there is no historical data to tell us if the time reading newspapers is growing  or is in decline due to the Internet. For instance in the US the very respected Veronis Suhler Stevenson (VSS) annual survey released in August said that newspaper usage will drop 4% this year over last.

And more ominous it said that the total time spend on media activities in 2006 was less than 2005 and most analysts take that to mean people are spending more time on the Internet and are getting quite sophisticated in finding the information they want and so less time is spent searching around.

Whatever, the UK numbers must be encouraging news for newspaper and magazine publishers everywhere, particularly those  who are targeting weekend print readership – The Wall Street Journal’s Saturday edition and Time Magazine switching to a Friday print so the magazine is available Saturday are just two examples.

So print is not dead. Those who buy their newspapers give them a pretty thorough read. It’s now up to publishers to ensure they continue to produce a product worthy of that time.


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