Print media consumption rose in 2023, and this trend should continue in 2024, according to a study by Pew Research Center.
Specifically, home and food magazines
grew as follows:
- Good Housekeeping, 12.1M readers, +2% vs. two years ago
- Southern Living, 11.7M readers, +5% vs. two years
ago
- Food Network Magazine, 11.3M readers, +28% vs. two years ago
- Taste of Home, 8.6M readers, +7% vs. two years ago
- HGTV Magazine, 8.1 million readers, +14% vs. two years ago
- Country Living, 7.6M readers, +18% vs. two years ago
- AllRecipes, 7.5M readers, +34% vs. two years ago
- Food & Wine, 6.7M readers, +23% vs. two years ago
Meanwhile, high in-home
readership magazines include:
- AARP The Magazine, 38.9M readers (89% in-home), +5% vs. two years ago
- Costco Connection, 32.4M readers (90% in-home),
+10% vs. two years ago
- AllRecipes (64% in-home), 7.5M readers, +34% vs. two years ago
- TV Guide (61% in-home), 6.7M readers, +20% vs. two
years ago
- Taste of Home (56% in-home), 8.6M readers, +7% vs. two years ago.
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MRI-Simmons reports that 80%+ of 100+
national magazines have lower readership than they did a decade ago. But, over the past two years, nearly 90% of those have maintained or actually increased readership.
Catalogs are also
growing apace. "Amazon’s Holiday Dash catalog which tops 100 pages, has been described as a mashup of the iconic Sears catalog and Highlights magazine," Pew writes. "And it’s been a huge
hit with kids and parents alike. The Neiman Marcus holiday catalog turned 97 this year and shows no signs of slowing down — as its 2023 luxury travel section and 80-page fine jewelry insert
clearly suggest. And L.L. Bean, which famously shifted its focus to TV and digital in 2017, is also leaning into print this year in a big way."