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Archive for the ‘News Weeklies’ Category

  • Aug
  • 18

Uncertainty Bolsters the News Weekly Market

The News Weeklies continue to fare well in the latest circulation figures, perhaps a reflection of people’s desire to keep informed in these less stable times and of a fall in confidence in traditional authority sources of knowledge, such as financial institutions. They certainly provide an attractive, educated and knowledge-seeking audience for premium and luxury advertisers.

The highest circulating news weekly remains Private Eye, which posted a slight decrease January to June 2010 vs. July to December 2009 (1.2%) and a stable year on year result.

The top performers in terms of growth were The Week and the Economist; both titles reported increases on the previous 6 month period and year on year, including strong growth in subscribers.

The Spectator did not perform as well, reporting a 6.3% fall year on year, although it held steady period on period.  New Scientist also saw its circulation drop by 5.5% year on year but posted a stable period on period result.

News Weeklies - ABC's Jan-Jun 10 News Weeklies – ABC’s Jan-Jun 10
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By: Graham Painter

  • Apr
  • 9

News Weeklies Weather the Storm

The Week - Recession Busting Circulation Increase

The Week - Recession Busting Circulation Increase

The weekly news sector has been fairly robust because of the recession and the affluence of its readers. Its readers have wanted to remain informed about the state of the economy and politics and the depth of comment and analysis provided by these titles is arguably more thorough than that provided on line. The sector has, however, reported mixed results.

Private Eye continues to be market leader (206,550) posting increases both period on period and yr on yr (1.6% and 0.6% respectively).  The Week celebrates another successful ABC with a market-busting 10.3% increase yr on yr and still without a digital platform.  The Economist posted its 56th consecutive increase rising 2.6% yr on yr, boosted by a cinema campaign although the number of actively purchased copies was down 4.3% yr on yr (77% of its circulation). The Spectator posted disappointing results continuing its downward trend, it fell -2.7% period on period and -2.4% yr on yr which must be disappointing for the new editor, Frazer Nelson, who took over in September.

Newsweek, Time, and New Scientist all posted slight decreases.

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By: Graham Painter

  • Jan
  • 14

The London Weekly – Here to Stay or Gone Tomorrow?

The London Weekly

The London Weekly

The London Weekly, the free commuter newspaper for London due to launch at the beginning of February, has launched its website, www.thelondonweekly.co.uk, and on twitter.

The owners, the privately-owned Global Publishing Group, have promised a newspaper focused on entertainment, light politics, music and sports, aimed at an 18-44 professional audience.  Celebrity and soap news will be complemented by Going Out/Staying In Guides, Horoscopes from Russell Grant and TV & Satellite listings.  The print offering will be accompanied by online radio and TV stations, both available via the website and for the latter, via YouTube.

All London Weekly channels will be highly interactive, with 30% of the content being generated from readers. The owners aim to connect with their audience via a wide range of social media including Facebook, YouTube and Twitter. 

The cornerstone of the strategy will be the distribution approach.  Copies will be available on Fridays and Saturdays at tube stations in Zones 1 and 2 – when the audience will be in ‘planning the weekend’ mode and more receptive to advertisers’ messages. The fact it is a weekly publication will no doubt also make it a more substantial offering than the recently demised daily London freesheets.

The London Weekly is clearly aimed at the market onced served by thelondonpaper and the London Lite, with an editorial offering bridging the gap between weightier offerings like the Evening Standard and entertainment and lifestyle publications such as Shortlist and Stylist. The questions remains however - is this a true gap in the market or will the London Weekly disappear between the 2 stools it is trying to straddle? With the Evening Standard delaying a decision on increasing its circulation from 600,000 to 800,000, its unclear if London can support the free commuter publications it already has, let alone a new entrant.

As yet, much is promised and much has yet to be delivered.  The site is little more than a shell at the moment, with limited content, much of it out of date. The social media channels, which will form such a key part of the interactive strategy, are also still in the development phase with only the twitter account active. Still, we’re promised a multimedia advertising campaign to promote the February launch this month which should help us to understand more about the substance of the offering.

One thing is for sure - as the £10m cash pile of the London Weekly’s owners is less than thelondonpaper lost in its first year, we’ll know if we have a new, permanent addition to the London media scene before the year is out.

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By: Graham Painter

  • Aug
  • 27

Mixed Results for News Weeklies in Jan-Jun 09 ABCs

The weekly news sector reported mixed results. Private Eye continues to be the market leader with sales of 203,234. The Week recorded its 22nd consecutive increase with a 10.3% increase year on year to 165,609 and The Economist added a further 2.6% to 187,341. Advertising revenues are down considerably however and even these successful titles are looking to either cost-cutting measures or alternative revenue streams. The Week has just made its publishers’ role redundant and The Economist has announced that it is to start charging for its online content, which is expected to come into effect over the next 6 months.

The Spectator dropped -2.4% year on year. The title usually picks up sales in election years and it will be hoping for a repeat of this as a General Election draws nearer. Time and Newsweek were both down. Newsweek’s owners; The Washington Post, made a considerable investment earlier this year, with an overhaul of design and content, but has failed to recoup any of this as circulation was down 1.9%.

ABC Circulations Jan-Jun 09 - News Weeklies

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By: Catriona Deery