
Consumer magazines
took it on the chin in the first quarter of 2009 -- with ad pages plunging to 37,196 compared to 50,170 in the same period in 2008, according to the Publishers Information Bureau. That's a
year-over-year decline of just under 13,000, or 26%. Magazine rate card revenue fell 20.2% to $4.2 billion. This figure is especially ominous considering these revenue figures are often inflated, due
to big discounts that publishers offer to advertisers in private.
The losses came across the board, in all the major magazine categories, including celebrity weeklies, shelter,
lifestyle, food and epicurean, enthusiast, and auto mags. Many titles experienced losses of over 30%.
In alphabetical order, the biggest losers included Architectural Digest (down 47.2%),
Automobile Magazine (39.2%), Autoweek (34.7%), Boating (47.4%), BusinessWeek, (39.8%), Conde Nast Portfolio (60.9%), Conde Nast Traveler (33.3%), Dwell
(36.4%), Entertainment Weekly (37.5%), ESPN Magazine (31.8%), Food & Wine (30.2%), Gourmet (40%), GQ (32.4%), In Touch Weekly (37.4%), Inc. (46.7%),
Life & Style Weekly (51.4%), Lucky (35.1%), Martha Stewart Living (37%), Men's Journal (33.9%), Motor Trend (31.9%), Motorboating (42.5%), New York
(39.5%), The New Yorker (35.7%), Real Simple (34.1%), Road & Track (32.3%), Runners World (34.5%), Southern Accents (35%), Southern Living (33.5%),
Spin (39.3%), Teen Vogue (41.2%), and Town & Country (36.2%).
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These steep losses reflected big cuts in major advertising categories. Drugs and remedies saw ad pages fall 13%,
food and food products 22.8%, apparel and accessories 23.7%, retail 34%, automotive 47.5%, and financial, real estate and insurance 45.7%.
Separately, TNS Media Intelligence released its Group
Publishers' Report, which sums total ad pages for the big magazine publishing groups, giving some idea of corporate health.
In the first three months of 2009, Conde Nast's ad pages are down 31%
compared to the first quarter of 2008; Time Inc.'s ad pages are down 23.8%; Hearst is down 25%; Bonnier is down 22.4%; Hachette Filipacchi is down 25.2%; and Meredith is down 12.4%.