Study shows video
playing big role for newspaper sites
Newspapers targeting smartphone
users as consumers demand more content aimed at portable devices.
By Marcelo Duran
Associate Editor
Newspapers are increasingly mining video and multimedia to boost their online
traffic, according to a recent study from The Bivings Group.
The study said 92 percent of
the largest 100 U.S. newspaper sites are offering video, a 31 percent jump from
last year.
Thirty-nine papers offer
original video content, 26 use video streams from the Associated Press, 13 offer
video content from local news outlets, four use all three technologies and 10
papers use a mixture of two different types of video, the study said.
“While many industry experts
fear that the Internet will spell the end of newspapers as we know them, [we
feel] that the Internet presents newspapers with a unique opportunity to make up
for lost circulation and readership,” said Erin Teeling, new media associate for
the Washington, D.C.-based consultant.
The Bivings Group analyzed Web
sites of the top 100 highest circulation newspapers based on the Audit Bureau of
Circulations’ March 31, 2007 Fas-Fax report. Each site was evaluated based on
the presence or lack of Web 2.0 features.
The study found that the use
of interactive features increased in nearly every category compared to its
report from last year.

Ninety-seven papers offer RSS
partial text feeds, 95 percent of papers offer at least one reporter blog and 88
percent of newspapers allow comments on blogs, the report said.
Other findings include:
• The number of papers
requiring registration increased by six from last year. Of this group three
papers required a paid subscription, while 26 papers offered free access after
registration.
• Forty-four percent of
newspapers provide some form of bookmarking. In 2006, only 7 percent of
newspapers provided bookmarking.
• Almost half (49 percent) of
newspapers now offer online podcasts, compared to only 31 percent last year.
It’s new to U.S.
The development by newspapers
of content geared to mobile devices, meantime, grew sharply, with 53 percent of
papers producing news and information for cell phone users. The metric wasn’t
even tracked in last year’s report.
Bivings cited the evolution of
more sophisticated smartphones as a driving force fueling the growth of mobile
offerings from U.S. newspapers.
Still, U.S. papers lag behind
mobile marketing strategies employed by newspapers in other parts of the world,
particularly in Europe and Japan (see Newspapers & Technology, July 2007).
The 2007 study also tracked
user participation, monitoring such activities as user comment, user-generated
content and social networking.
The number of newspapers
permitting user comment, the study said, rose from 19 percent to 33 percent,
while nearly 25 percent of newspapers accepted user-generated content, spanning
photos, videos and articles.
Five percent of papers
incorporated social networking features on their sites, including USA Today (see
Newspapers & Technology, June 2007), The Denver Post and The Washington Post.
Grabbing a piece of the
revenue pie
The Bivings study also found
that while papers have added new features to their Web sites, many are
“relatively unwilling” to link their sites to other sources and that papers
continue to keep some content behind virtual walls.
At the same time, newspapers
aren’t taking enough advantage of RSS technology. Instead, Bivings said papers
should tap into the protocol’s monetization capabilities in a bid to attract new
revenues.
Finally, Bivings attempted to
answer the million-dollar question plaguing newspaper publishers: how to develop
a profitable online model that will offset the losses in print advertising.
One recommendation: Papers
should create Web sites strategically and visually superior to those of
competitors.
For small newspapers, Bivings
suggested they should steer away from AP and generic content and instead offer
unique, hyper-localized information that is difficult to find elsewhere.
Finally, Bivings said
publishers need to understand that consumers read both print and online editions
of their newspapers, citing as proof a Scarborough study that reported that 81
percent of those polled using both print and electronic editions.
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Getting closer to you
As video gains a
foothold on newspaper Web sites, the demands associated with managing
such high-bandwidth content is moving front and center.
Content handling
companies such as Tewksbury, Mass.-based Mirror Image Internet are
playing a more significant role as content demands grow.
The company, which
is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, helps customers manage
and distribute bandwidth-intensive content through a network of content
access points located at strategic points around the Internet.
When a user requests
a particular item, Mirror Image determines the most appropriate server
from which to route the information.
Jim Hart, vice
president of sales and marketing for MI, said the company has 23 of
these massive data center-like environments deployed globally.
MI counts several
large papers as clients, including The New York Times and Boston Globe
(see Newspapers & Technology, July 2005).
“We are helping to
incorporate video on newspaper sites to give the end user a richer media
experience,” Hart said, adding that clients are adding video at a rapid
clip. |