Tossup on Future Print, But Relevant Today
Lori Rosen, founder and president of The Rosen Group, points out that these findings suggest that, though there is a strong shift to online news consumption and a preference for online sources for breaking news, Americans still find print publications to be important sources, especially for entertainment.
Rosen concludes that "... people are not abandoning their print editions... there is still a certain satisfaction and ease to holding printed text in your hands, and PDAs or PCs will not replace this just yet."
Other survey findings:
- 29% of respondents say a news website is the most indispensable news source, while 18% select print newspapers and 16% cite online newspapers
- 55% say they look at a printed newspaper each day, 53% subscribe to a print newspaper, and 83% say newspapers are still relevant
- 30% say news websites are their top source for updates, and 66% say that websites are among their daily news sources
- 65% of respondents find weekly news magazines relevant
- 29% of respondents read blogs multiple times a day, 8% read them once a week, 37% read them occasionally and 37% never read them
- 60% of respondents believe the information on blogs is not credible
Though the majority of Americans go online to learn about daily breaking news, print magazines remain one of the top sources for entertainment, advice and lifestyle information.
| Source(s) of News | |
| News Source | % of Respondents (Multiple Response OK) |
| News website | 65.3% |
| Newspaper (online) | 56.7 |
| Newspaper (print) | 55.4 |
| National TV news | 55.1 |
| Local television affiliate | 41.8 |
| News aggregator | 35.9 |
| Blogs | 22.6 |
| Social networking site | 10.5 |
| Source: The Rosen Group, February 2009 | |
The survey found that despite a growing preference for online news sites, print magazines are a leading entertainment source. Nearly 80% of respondents say they subscribe to magazines vs. 53% for newspapers.
| Primary Media Source of Entertainment, Advice, Lifestyle Information (% of Respondents) | |
| Primary Source | % of Respondents |
| Print magazines | 27.0% |
| Website | 25.2 |
| Blogs | 10.9 |
| Print newspaper | 10.2 |
| National TV network | 7.5 |
| Online magazines | 6.8 |
| Social networking site | 5.9 |
| Online newspaper | 5.0 |
| Local TV affiliate | 1.6 |
| Source: The Rosen Group, February 2009 | |
For additional information, please contact the Rosen Group here, or Marketing Charts for tables.
0 comments on "Tossup on Future Print, But Relevant Today".
Leave a Comment
You must be a member to comment. Become a Member
Recent Research Brief Articles
-
Coupon In A Booklet, With A Deal, Best Restaurant Ad May 25, 6:52 a.m.
According to a research initiative by the National Restaurant Association and LivingSocial to study consumer perceptions related ...
-
Radio Is An Emotional Attachment May 24, 6:15 a.m.
According to Jacobs Media’s new study of core radio listeners, the high-tech revolution continues, but broadcast ...
-
Is There An Afterlife? May 23, 7:15 a.m.
According to Bitly research studies and analysis, different social networks have their own distinct personalities. The ...
-
Online Window Shopping Sales Converters May 22, 6:15 a.m.
This brief has been updated on 5/23 to reflect attribution corrections brought to our attention. According ...
-
What You Got For 38 Bucks May 21, 6:15 a.m.
Following the Facebook IPO launch on Friday, Experian Hitwise has provided an updated post based on ...
-
Store Brands Gaining Ground On National Brand Strengths May 18, 6:15 a.m.
According to a study conducted by Ipsos Marketing, store brands may be starting to improve on ...
-
Shared Content Acquires Profitable Customers May 17, 6:15 a.m.
According to the Curata 2012 Content Curation Adoption Survey, curation has become mainstream, with the majority ...
-
Digital Challenges, But Traditional Still Tops With Agencies May 16, 6:16 a.m.
Bolstered by political advertising, TV attracted the most ad dollars in early 2012, But Social is ...
-
Consumers Bail If Service Is Bad (...duh) May 15, 6:15 a.m.
According to the 2012 American Express Global Customer Service Barometer consumers who have used social media ...
-
The Social Sharing Shortcut To Registration May 14, 6:15 a.m.
According to the current quarterly study by Janrain Engage, across 365,000 websites analyzing social login and ...
Center for Media Research
This research would be a 100x more relevant if it gave demographic context. I'd be more interested in knowing what 18 to 35's thought.
I agree with David but I'd like to take it further. I'd like to see all the demos (age, income, education, etc.).
I'd also like to know how the survey was conducted and it's methodology.
Hi All,
We conducted the survey over a five-day period in February using online tool SurveyMonkey. Full results are available here: http://www.surveymonkey.com/sr.aspx?sm=4NuhAOmdyWMstEGKfvAOu6mITee_2fW8_2b_2bZ2_2b9KP9OeQ8_3d
We have PDFs available of responses broken down by age group. The responses are equally as compelling: 51 percent of 25-41 year olds say print media will still be around in 10 years--and only 12.7 percent said print pubs won't exist. Thirty-six percent were uncertain.
Please email me at alison@rosengrouppr.com if you'd like electronic copies of the age demographic breakdowns.
Thanks again for your interest.
Was a comparison done btween the "53% that subscribe to a daily newspaper" and actual subscription numbers by just the top ten market's newspapers? Not circulation, but paying subscribers. If 53% of the population subscribed...I don't think they'd be stopping the presses as fast as they are. Interesting that they listed: newspapers, newspaper websites and TV stations. The key omission being local TV station websites which are quickly meeting and beating local newspaper site's traffic due to the rich video content that is added constantly.
There was an interesting tidbit about Americans finding print to still be relevant, especially for entertainment. Print isn't dying but the deck of media usage is getting shuffled and we're all being dealt new hands. The newspaper folks are figuring out that their core business is news, not ink and paper. The delivery mechanism is almost irrelevant for them.