New York Times Print Revenue Slides, Online Glides
The worst news came from the Times' New England division, where troubles at the Boston Globe contributed to a 15.7 percent overall decline in ad revenue. Here, demand was soft across a range of national ad categories, including telecommunications, financial services, national automotive, travel and entertainment. Investors are pressuring the Times to sell the Globe, and the poor August performance, coming after an 11.7 percent year-over-year decline in July and a 10 percent drop in June, may foreshadow more big transactions on the newspaper market in 2007.
As in recent months, Internet revenue was a bright spot on the ' ledger next to mediocre print ad sales--but in August the numbers weren't quite as buoyant as before, with a relatively modest increase of 17.3 percent over August 2005. By comparison, July revenues were up 27.5 percent compared to last year, June was up 23 percent, and May was up 27 percent.
And taking a longer view, the rate of increase is clearly slowing from year to year as well: overall, 2005 saw a 30 percent growth in online revenue over 2004.
Given the slowdown at one of the nation's most Web-savvy newspapers, the August figures raise a troubling question for newspaper publishers: is the online boom, limited as it was, already ending? Although the Times hasn't provided information about classified versus display advertising, the slowing overall growth rate could be due to slackening demand for online classifieds, one of newspapers' key sources of online revenue.
On this point Ken Doctor, a newspaper industry analyst with Outsell, Inc., warned that reliance on recruitment and real estate leaves online papers especially vulnerable to an economic downturn. "The greatest concern going forward is that the economy appears to be slowing, and publishers should be thinking about what will happen cyclically to those two areas," Doctor said. "It looks like hiring is softening, and that could have a serious impact on recruitment revenues."
Doctor said that the real estate slowdown hasn't yet hurt newspapers because homeowners are continuing to sell their houses--especially because it takes slightly longer than in the past. But a downturn that spurs sellers to pull houses off the market altogether could put a big dent in classified revenue, he added.
Newspapers would do well to beef up their contextual pay-per-click ads, he said, adding: "They've been too reliant on Google and Yahoo." And newspapers should make more of an effort to target visitors based on the pages they view, according to Doctor. Currently, Tacoda and Revenue Science have deals with many newspapers to target online readers based on their on-site behavior. "Now that you have tracking mechanisms in place, advertisers, merchants and national brands will pay more money to sites that deliver more paying customers," he says.
Recent MediaDailyNews Articles
-
How Social Is Transforming TV May 21, 5:46 p.m.
Live from OMMA Video, Viacom Media Networks is unveiling its findings from “When Networks Network: TV ... -
Chicago Awards O'Hare Digital Signage Biz To Clear Channel Airports May 21, 4:30 p.m.
The Chicago City Council has awarded Clear Channel Airports a five-year contract, with the option for ... -
NDTV Challenges WPP, Tries To Revive Lawsuit In NY May 21, 4:26 p.m.
New Delhi Television is trying to revive its $1 billion lawsuit against Nielsen, WPP and a ... -
Horizon Taps Gambelli As Chief Investment Officer May 21, 4:18 p.m.
Former NBC senior advertising sales executive Marianne Gambelli has landed at Horizon Media as its executive ... -
Ad Council Raises Autism Awareness May 21, 3:41 p.m.
The Ad Council has partnered with Autism Speaks and two agencies, BBDONew York and LatinWorks, to ... -
CBS Scores Big Victory In 18-49 Demo May 21, 3:11 p.m.
Just two days before the finish of the TV season, CBS claims a major victory among ... -
TiVo Boosts Revs, Data Efforts May 21, 2:54 p.m.
TiVo made gains for its first-quarter revenue results with higher cable operator subscriptions.The time-shifting and technology ... -
Updated: Out-Of-Home Trading Platform Integrates With Mediaocean, Posterscope Backs Move May 21, 8:07 a.m.
(Editor's Note: Posterscope denies it is backing ADstruc. A Clarification has been published here.) While ... -
Networks' Top Goal: Ad Dollars Trump Studio-Produced Shows May 21, 8:06 a.m.
With Netflix and Amazon writing hefty checks, it bears watching whether networks will increasingly pick up ... -
Budweiser Bows New Campaign, Topped With Responsible-Drinking Blimp May 20, 5:26 p.m.
Summer is a time of concerts and festivals and beach-going, all of which carry the attendant ...


Be the first to comment on "New York Times Print Revenue Slides, Online Glides"
Leave a Comment