By Marcelo Duran
Associate Editor
Automobiles are not the only ones going hybrid.
As newspapers face declining
print circulation figures, one bright spot in this spring’s Audit Bureau of
Circulations Fas-Fax figures was the increase in electronic edition readership,
fueled by so-called hybrid subscriptions (see sidebar, page 20).
Case in point: The Denver
Newspaper Agency, which saw whopping increases in the number of readers
subscribing to the Rocky Mountain News and Denver Post (see chart, page 20).
Bernie Gitt, the DNA’s
director of circulation consumer relations, said hybrid subscriptions, where a
consumer receives a print delivery in combination with electronic access, has
yielded big benefits.
“This concept was started as a
sales strategy and was tested in late 2006 and has also been one of the primary
acquisition offerings this year,” said Gitt. “ABC qualifies this as a 7-day
subscription, with the method of delivery being different.”
The DNA offers combination
packages of printed Sunday or weekend service plus access to electronic edition
the other days of the week.
Another high-flyer, The Orange
County (Calif.) Register, counts more than 14,000 hybrid subscribers in addition
to its 1,000 pure 7-day electronic-only subs.
Online convenience
The online convenience of
electronic editions is a primary motivator, said Larry Riley, vice president of
circulation and distribution.
“People that are tech-savvy,
but like the traditional feel of a newspaper, are hooked because they’re not
only comfortable with the news layout, but they like the traditional way of
advertising and the ability to interact with advertising,” he said.
Electronic editions also help
drive down the bottom line for newspapers looking to trim costs.
“A newspaper does not incur
the typical cost of print, freight and delivery, which can run anywhere from 35
cents a copy to 70 cents (depending on page count or day of week,” Riley said.
Readers also like the layout
of The Register’s e-edition, which holds the familiar look readers are used to
in the print format.
“It’s a foray into becoming a
geek while holding onto what’s customary and comfortable,” Riley said. “Reading
a newspaper has been described as a leisure activity and the presentation of a
newspaper in a somewhat traditional format plus access online gives a reader the
best of both worlds.”
Both The Register and DNA
launched electronic editions in 2004 and use Olive Software Inc.’s ActivePaper
software for their digital versions.
ABC’s list of the top 25
electronic edition newspapers includes a diverse crowd of dailies, spanning the
gamut of size and notoriety.
The top five newspapers
include The Wall Street Journal, Investor’s Business Daily, The Register,
(Minneapolis) Star Tribune and The Denver Post.
The first two papers require
paid subscription membership for online access; the three others reported
double- to triple-digit jumps in e-edition figures from March 2006.
New features to woo
interest
At the same time, electronic
edition vendors are supplying more sophisticated products engineered to cater to
a reader’s personal tastes.
NewspaperDirect, for example,
has among its features the ability to link specific objects, such as an
advertiser’s phone number, to elements that might be requested by the user.
The XML extractor technology
“allows us to work with the PDF files and extract the description of pages,”
said Igor Smirnoff, NewspaperDirect’s director of strategic development. “We
understand very intimately the relationship between different objects within
each paper.”
NewspaperDirect also offers a
feature in its SmartEdition product line that translates articles into 12
different languages, from English to Chinese.
“Many of our publishing
partners take advantage of this feature as they see this to be one of the ways
they can reach out to new demographics,” Smirnoff said. “How great is it to for
a large Hispanic population to read the Los Angeles Times in Spanish?”
NewspaperDirect also offers a
blogging feature, which Smirnoff says is an attempt to help its newspaper
clients reach out to that segment of Internet users.
“Blogging is a very
interesting market segment for us,” said Smirnoff, adding that he believes the
feature is a “very important vehicle for proper legal content propagation.”
“It’s the matter of how we
present and give the tools we give to bloggers to work with the newspaper
content while preserving the trackability and control of publishers so they can
see where the content is being used.”
Regardless of technologies
available for electronic editions, Riley said that digital delivery is the
direction the newspaper market is headed.
“Readers love to thumb through
the pages of a print newspaper, but they’re also becoming accustomed to
accessing news and information online,” he said.

| What’s a hybrid
sub? The Audit
Bureau of Circulations defines a hybrid subscription as one where a
newspaper offers a consumer a single subscription, but some days of the
week the subscription is delivered via an electronic edition, while the
remaining days of the week are delivered in print.
When newspapers offer
a hybrid subscription to its readers, no less than 25 percent of basic
prices must be collected for the frequency being delivered, ABC said.
Other guidelines to a
hybrid subscription include:
• A “hybrid frequency”
may not be established for the purpose of basic prices. Only one set of
home-delivery basic prices for a seven-day frequency may be established
and at least 25 percent of these prices must be collected for all
seven-day subscriptions regardless if they are print only, electronic
only or a hybrid.
• The newspaper may
not position any days of the week as free, no additional cost, no extra
charge, or other synonymous language.
• If premiums are
offered with a hybrid subscription, then the premium rule applies, which
requires collection of a qualifying price for the newspaper plus the
full value of the premium, ABC said. |
