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  • Feb
  • 28

Women’s Magazines – ‘Flat’ is the New ‘Growth’

In 2009, agencies were  widely informed by magazines across every sector, not just the women’s, that static postings on ABC’s were ‘the new increases’ and it seems the same trends continue for the latest July-December 2010 postings.  

When delving into the full reports on the last 2 periods analysis we saw figures being manipulated by increases in free circulation and distribution via multi-packing.  In the latest ABC’s there is a  shift towards ex UK sales for many of the women’s titles who are reporting static circulation period on period.  Although the latest half year to be monitored covers the traditional summer holiday months, many UK focused retailers and brands will be unaware from top line figures that a significant number of their core titles have actually had significant decreases in the UK sales of their magazines.

 Whilst Glamour still leads the circulation race by 100,000 copies over and above its nearest challenger Cosmopolitan, the title suffered its largest period on period (POP) decrease for many years, down 4.8%.  However if we look at the proportion that the UK figures have dropped based on single sales POP, UK sales are actually down 7%.  Cosmopolitan by comparison also posted a reduction of 0.29% POP whereas the actual UK sales were down 2.4%.  Not all titles in the sector are guilty of only growing circulations through overseas sales, although Elle posts modest increases in their free and bulk copies, they continue to strengthen their position in the UK market by increasing UK sales POP and reducing the volume of overseas sales.

In the middle youth sector, Easy Living was the main casualty with a decline of 5.88% POP.  The sector as a whole continued to show buoyancy with the previous year’s investments in editorial and fashion specifically paying off for Good Housekeeping and Women & Home, who posted increases of 5 and 4.5% respectively, further reiterating the purchasing power of this audience. 

The latter 6 months of 2010 were good for the high end international fashion and lifestyle titles – Vogue, Harpers Bazaar, Tatler and Vanity fair, who all posted small but consistent growths in circulation.  The trend seems set to continue into 2011 with many of this set posting their biggest ever issues in the SS11 season and increased efforts  to gain market share from each other by themed issues and additional supplements to the titles. 

Whilst the next year will undoubtedly see significant changes to the sector with National Magazines acquisition of Hachette, the most concern is for Marie Claire, which, despite IPC’s continued editorial tweaks from reader feedback, posted its 9th successive decrease POP and the largest since Jan-June 09 with a POP drop of -5.35%.

Womens_ Lifestyle_ABCs

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By: Karen Stephenson

  • Oct
  • 28

Bauer Launches GAZ7ETTA Pilot, But Is There a Market For It?

Ga7etta's Pilot Edition

Ga7etta's Pilot Edition

Bauer have launched their new men’s title, GAZ7ETTA, with 500,000 pilot copies stitched into this week’s edition of Grazia magazine.

Despite the fact that the title has been dubbed ‘Grazia for Men’, Bauer are keen for the new title to be distanced from the popular women’s magazine.  Pilot editions will also be appearing in other titles in Bauer’s portfolio of  men’s entertainment, sporting, motoring and lifestyle magazines. Part of the reason for this is that editions launched in other markets that have been tied overtly to Grazia, notably Grazia Uomo in Italy and Gala Man in Germany, have not performed to expectations.

The raison d’etre behind the title was the desire to launch a more rounded and intelligent weekly magazine for the ‘4D man’, a segment identified by Bauer’s own research who find the ‘laddish’ mentality of titles such as Loaded a turn off.

And there’s no doubt the team behind the pilot issue have done an excellent  job – the design is stylish and distinctive  and the articles are intelligent and thought-provoking. However, the magazine has been produced by the Grazia team and some of the content is perhaps a little off target. For example, an article on Carla Bruni’s spending habits will be of limited interest to mainstream male audience, even an upmarket one.

The big question with regard to the success of GAZ7ETTA is not whether ‘4D man’ exists, but whether he wants to read a weekly, paid-for lifestyle magazine.

Men in UK Cities already have the chance to pick up a free copy of Shortlist, which contains a similar style of content. And men tend to prefer specialist titles which cater for their interests – for example sport, film and gadgets magazines – rather than the more generic titles that may be picked up as a time filler but probably won’t generate more than a cursory read.

It’s unlikely we’ll know the success of this pilot until next year at the earliest – another sampling exercise is planned in the Spring. Only then will Bauer make a decision as to whether to launch the title standalone and will we know whether we have a new, permanent addition to the men’s magazine market.

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By: Karen Stephenson

  • Aug
  • 24

Cosmopolitan is Latest Magazine to Launch into Lucrative Sub Brand Market

Cosmopolitan Launches Cosmo on Campus

Cosmopolitan Launches Cosmo on Campus

The quarterly free to market ‘Cosmo on Campus’, will launch to 65 universities focusing on the student market, hitting the streets in October just post the hype of Fresher’s Week. 

With a circulation of 250,000 copies specifically geared to 18 – 21 year old females, the magazine will be packed with bespoke content on how to survive student life with supporting collateral from their online and social media platforms.  The publication will be 56 pages and printed on recycled paper similar to the ones used for Stylist and Shortlist, targeting the 750,000 strong UK female student audience. 

With 30%* of the main magazine’s readership falling into the profitable 18-24 YO age range, its unsurprising that the  offshoot has been developed as a long term loyalty and subscriptions driver to help recruit readers to Cosmo and the print medium, befriending them at a early stage in their consumption lifecycle before they graduate to the main brand. 

Cannily by recruiting ‘Cosmo Ambassadors’ from media/fashion/creative degrees at each campus to hand out the title, undoubtedly encompassing their work doing so into their course,   Cosmopolitan will have a series of handpicked loyalists in a market that remains uncluttered from the large media houses.  An intelligent move, lets see who follows!

* NRS April 09-March 10

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By: Karen Stephenson

  • Jan
  • 28

What Are People Prepared to Pay For Online?

Almost 50% of consumers around the world are open to more online advertising if it results in free content, the latest Nielsen research has revealed.

But attitudes vary widely dependent on geography, demography and content type. For example, in the Middle East, Africa and Asia/Pacific more than 50% of respondents to the survey said they were interested in more advertising compared with just 40% of North Americans and 39% of Europeans.

Consumers are more likely to pay for content such as music, games, professionally-produced video and movies than for podcasts, blogs or consumer-generated video. In fact, the top 5 types of content that consumers have paid for or would consider paying for are music, feature films, games, professionally-produced video and magazines.

Will the Apple iPad Boost Magazine Subscriptions?

Will the Apple iPad Boost Magazine Subscriptions?

This is good news for some publishers – magazines, for example, are hoping that the latest raft of ereaders and yesterday’s launch of the iPad will create a demand for digital editions which will help shore up circulations.  In addition, there looks like there could be a future for advertiser-funded catch-up video-on-demand services like SeeSaw, which launched in beta earlier this week.

But whether ‘paid for’ models for online news can work is still the subject of heated debate. We’ll know more by the Spring when News International is expected to erect a universal paywall around timesonline.co.uk.

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By: Karen Stephenson

  • Nov
  • 10

Media Consumption Grows Amongst Europe’s Business Elite

Europe’s business elite may have cut back on travelling and personal investments but they are consuming more media according to the latest Business Elite: Europe Survey*.

50% of the respondents had visited an international media owners’ website, up 7% on last year, and 80% had watched an international TV channel in the last week, up 17% on 2008.

Of the TV channels included in the survey, all 8 had shown an improvement on last year with CNN International posting a weekly reach of 15% of the survey’s sample, Sky News 14.2%, the Discovery Channel 12.6%, BBC World News 11.3% and National Geographic 10.5%.

The Weekly titles proved to the most resilient of the print sector with most titles on a par with or slightly above last year’s reach figures.  The Economist posted a 12.3% reach, Time 7%, BusinessWeek (recently acquired by Bloomberg from McGraw-Hill) 4.7% and Newsweek 4.5%.

Of the monthly titles, Harvard Business Review led the way with a reach of 9.4%, National Geographic posted 8.5%, Euromoney 2.7%, Bloomberg Markets Magazine 2.6%, Institutional Investor 1.6% and Scientific American 1.4%.

The Financial Times led the dailies with a reach of 14.7%, followed by the Wall Street Journal Europe with 2.3%, the International Herald Tribune with 1.7% and USA Today with 1.6%.  Reach of all daily titles, with the exception of the FT, dipped slightly on last year.

The figures are good news for the media owners and good news for those luxury advertisers who resisted the temptation to make significant cuts to their budgets and will have benefited from not only an increased reach in this economically important audience but also from a greater share of voice.

*The Business Elite Europe Survey is conducted on a sample of over 7,000 senior executives across 17 European countries and is widely used for planning corporate business and financial campaigns.

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By: Karen Stephenson