If you read one speech from the President of a major newswire today..make it this one

Tom Curley of the AP speaking at the Knight Bagehot Dinner yesterday. Some choice bits.

We — the news industry — have come to that fork in the road. We must take bold, decisive steps to secure the audiences and funding to support journalism’s essential role in both our economy and democracy, or find ourselves on an ugly path to obscurity.

The portals are running off with our best stuff, and we’re afraid or unable to make or enforce deals that drive fair value. Revenue lines in a good month are flat. In other months, they inspire the merchants of debt to imagine how they might take us over and show us how much smarter they are.

And…

We who rule content must start making decisions, the ones that deliver journalism for another generation of readers and viewers.

I’ve been inside many major news organizations the last couple years, and, invariably, I hear the same refrain. We know what to do, but we can’t get it done. Or, sadly, we’re in worse shape than we were two years ago because we’re spending even more proportionately trying to keep the old model functioning. More than a few persist in trying to make their online sites life rafts for newspapers or newscasts.

So, a few more things might have to change. The pressures on the bosses will have to build. Many more of us in leadership positions must step up and say, now.

Connoiseurs of Curley’s ouevre might want to see how he’s moved on from this 2004 speech to the ONA.

Digital investment:it’s no con, it’s a fact of life. Get used to it.

A couple of weeks ago, John Duncan, wrote a piece on his blog which was then edited and used in PressGazette. To be honest, after a brief e-mail exchange with John, I was just going to let it lie but, they asked me if I’d like to reply - so I did; and that reply was published today. I had to chop a few bits out - as did they, and then John had a bit more to say , so I added a bit more, so this is an extended, annotated version.

Two weeks ago, my former colleague John Duncan, took what might politely be called a pop at newspaper owners’ investments on the web.

He pointed out that the Guardian’s world-conquering website still had less UK users on a daily basis than the paper had readers; that newspaper owners had been ‘conned by the numbers from their web departments’; and, in fact, the internet was not ‘a beast’ but ‘a poodle’.

“The people running newspapers believe that the future is online…This is bad news for newspaper people, because not only are the reader numbers not very exciting online, neither are the prospects for selling advertising…”

Now, I don’t have a problem with John’s maths about comparative UK readership of the Guardian and Guardian Unlimited. However, I do think it’s pretty irrelevant, and I have a huge problem with the conclusions he draws; with his assessment of the UK online market; and perhaps most of all, with his assertion that online teams have somehow been ‘conning’ unsuspecting boards into making investments.

Before I get going, let me introduce as my first witness, Bill Keller, executive editor of the New York Times, interviewed earlier this month.

“At present, the print edition of The (New York) Times supplies most of our revenue and profit. I don’t expect that to change in a hurry. We have a variety of levers we can adjust to keep the print newspaper healthy. We can add features that attract new advertising. We can reorganize for greater efficiency. (One major example: consolidating New York area printing into a single, modernized plant.) We can raise prices. We can trim costs. And so on.

But the Web audience is growing at a great clip, while print circulation is not. And online revenues are growing faster, too, albeit from a smaller base. If the trend continues, there’s little doubt that — “eventually” — online becomes the main business”

I don’t know Bill Keller. He may well be the sort of gullible chap who is easily conned by evil web types, but let’s just assume that he didn’t get where he is today by not having a clue about the future of his industry.

What he is describing is the process of evolution and transition that the entire newspaper industry is going through.

Right now, if you want to add up daily readers and revenues print wins by a long mile. But every piece of research tells the same story. People are spending less time with newspapers and more time online [’Young People and News‘ from Harvard is just the latest] . The trend is, of course, particularly pronounced in under 30 year olds.

What do we think things will look like in five years? What about in 10? And do you really think you can wait until then before you start to take digital seriously?

And taking it seriously, of course means investment.

But, investing in what? Well, frankly, as an industry it’s time to stop thinking like ‘newspaper people’ and stop thinking about investing in print versus investing in digital. It’s time to start talking about investing in things that will best equip us for the next decade and beyond.

That means investing in journalism, and in our brands. It means investing in engaging with our readers and users and making sure we understand them like never before. It means providing the very best service for our advertisers; and it means making sure that we have the best editorial, commercial, technical and production teams possible.

Sometimes that will mean investing in digital, sometimes in print, and more often than not - in both.

Does this mean everyone should be able to get what they want? Hell, no! An organisation where there aren’t compromises - often painful ones - either has too much money or too little amibition for its own good.

What about John’s assertion that we will have no luck selling advertising? Well, our year on year figures would prove the opposite. And so, apparently, would those from the rest of the industry. The Association of Online Publishers annual survey revealed that its members - who include pretty much all of the UK’s main media owners, print and broadcast - experienced an average of 63% growth in digital revenues last year. Ahead, as it happens of the online market as a whole.

And this market is, frankly, growing like mad. An average of the current forecasts for growth in the UK market indicates that digital spending in the UK is going to grow from a £2bn market to approximately £4bn over the next two years. In other words, there is likely to be some £2bn of new money coming online.

But, isn’t much of this going to search (ie Google)?. Well, even if 50% of it is, that still leaves £1bn of new money left for us to fight for. When you consider that £1bn is more than the entire UK consumer magazine ad market, and nearly twice the size of the entire UK radio market you would have to be a fool to turn your back on this market.

Of course, that money is not going to be handed to us on a plate. We will face competition from all quarters: from global portals to start-ups hoping to feast on slithers of our classified revenues. This is our new reality. It is our new competitive landscape. There is no shortage of people who want to eat our lunch; and this is precisely why our digital offerings need to be in the best possible shape if we want to stand any chance to succeed online.

John says that broadband is nearly at penetration and therefore UK online audiences are unlikely to grow. Well, yes, growth rates are slowing - hardly surprisingly seeing as we have had the fastest growing broadband penetration among the major economies for the last five years according to OECD figures.

But we are nowhere near saturation point yet. Last month PWC forecast that we will move from 50% of households having broadband connections this year to 80% by 2011. That is another 30% of UK households - and this will probably be the 30% most likely to trust brands they have a relationship within the real world.

At the same time - all the evidence shows that the longer people have a connection, the more time they spend doing things online. So internet usage in the UK is set to grow for many years yet.

So has this all been some sort of con? I can’t tell you how much I object to the idea that myself and others who have spent the last decade or more conceiving and delivering digital strategies within newspapers have somehow been deliberately misleading boards.

I also can’t tell you how silly it would seem to anyone taking a cool look at the trends around our industry that digital investment was somehow ‘a con’.

Don’t get me wrong. Print has many healthy decades ahead of it. And much of our editorial and commercial success will depend on having strong presences both in print and online. I wouldn’t be still working in a newspaper group if I didn’t believe that. But on the key metrics of circulation and ad revenue those decades will be about gentle, and sometimes not so gentle, decline.

The online world, meanwhile, offers smart media owners potential for growth - in reach, reputation and revenue. None of this will be easily achieved - but without it, we That’s not a con. It’s a fact. And it’s time to learn to deal with it.

John’s latest post looks at McClatchy’s latest figures and tells us in a rather understated fashion: 8% of revenue: 100% of innovation effort: Why print people need to get to grip with the shocking numbers at the heart of the online newspaper con.

After proving something that didn’t really need to be proved - that newspapers won’t be able to cover their current cost base on their digital revenues he concludes:

“All I’m saying is that it might be better for us to invest in real print innovation before we decide to get into the dog of a business that the internet is going to be for us. Print still has a lot of revenue, a good base from which to redevlop our products and fight back. That’s great news, because the path down which newspaper companies are being led right now just leads to layoffs and bankruptcy.”

It’s funny that after such a data-rich expose John’s solution is the remarkably wooly: ‘invest in real print innovation’.

What ‘real print innovation’, I wonder, is there that is going to so dramatically turn around newspaper’ fortunes, King Canute?

The last decade in the UK has seen no shortage of print innovation and marketing investment across the market. Collectively, we have launched free papers and new sections; we have changed formats; we have given away CDs, DVDs and wallcharts. That is a lot of smart ideas, and a lot of cash.

The same is true in most developed newspaper markets. And each year WAN produces a lovely report to prove it.

This effort gives us some blips and bubbles of growth. In some cases, what might have been a crashing decline has been made much more gradual though many of the tactics described above. The net result though is that everyone is having to run much harder just to stand still.

And, yes, there is growth globally in newspaper markets, as WAN loves to trumpet each year - but not in the UK; not in the US and not in Western Europe. And, this isn’t the result of a lack of innovation - to suggest as much is frankly an insult to those who work in newspapers. It is the result of a structural shift in consumer behaviour and advertising budgets.

This is like gravity. And you can’t defy gravity just by jumping a little higher and harder.

The fact is that 100% of the threat and 100% of the real, long term growth potential for all our businesses lies with digital. And yes, proportionally, our 10 year old businesses are a lot smaller than the 100+ year old ones. But we have to start somewhere.

More than this, though, the idea that somehow the web has had 100% of the industry’s innovation and investment is hat stand.

Those with any memory at all will recall that between between the dot com crash and the moment when Rupert Murdoch stood up and announced his conversion to all things digital - a period of some five years - most newspapers - in the UK and elsewhere - woefully underinvested in their online activity. Not simply in terms of cash, but critically in terms of senior management energy, effort and conviction.
It was the organisations that kept the digital flag flying through that period: ourselves, the BBC, the New York Times and the Washington Post to name but a few which are now accepted as the leaders in the field.

It was during that period, for example that we overtook the early market leader the Telegraph. Despite overhauling their entire business in the last 18 months they haven’t really got anywhere near us since [see their ABCe vs ours]. Why? Because getting things right digitally takes years, not months. And stop/start spending was never the way to do it.

This isn’t just true in the field of journalism. Our automotive classified business, Auto Trader, also took the web seriously from the start - and never gave up. As a result it increased in value during that period. It is one of the few print classified titles to have made a successful digital transition - the result of taking significant risk and sticking with it.

I can understand that the figures don’t add up for John. They are not pretty. But, given the dramatic change that is happening around us, it would be a miracle if they were. If only everything were as clear as he’d like it to be. By the time it is - I fear it will be too late.

Ourselves, the music industry, the film industry, and my old favourite Kodak - all of us are caught in a hinterland between a world that we know well, but which we have to accept is not going to be with us for much longer, and one which is inevitable, but still doesn’t make complete sense to us.

By all means let’s not throw away our past. But let’s not cling on to it so tightly that we also throw away our future.

Those Guardian ads

Image003

Sitting through two sets of pitches five years apart for the Guardian and Guardian Unlimted’s ad agency, you become aware all too quickly of just how few decent ideas there are out there. One agency a few years ago proved the point to us of how similar newspaper TV ads were by running two of our rivals ads back to back - but with the soundtracks switched. No-one noticed.

Anyway - obviously I’m biased, but after the rather pedestrian ‘We’ve got a big website according to some spurious stats’ claim from the Telegraph; and Times Online’s ‘Here’s a witty quote from our content’ (the oldest trick in the book - and I felt a real missed opportunity to get across the idea that their website was ‘new and improved), I think the Guardian’s work stands up rather well - and its also a great case history for outdoor media. The pic above is at my local station - deep in enemy territory for the Guardian..I’m sure I’ve seen a few more copies on the train since we started.

But in case you’ve miseed it - my favourite is this ad - which I think is visually striking and captures the times and the Guardian’s tone of voice perfectly.

Listening To Lots

Newspaper site stats update

A quick check of the ABCe’s site shows that the Telegraph seems to have joined the monthly reporting gang and has kindly delivered audited figures for both January and February, even though the Times won’t be reporting till next month. Here are January and February’s figures.

Picture 2

And based on this data…which title would you say is Britain’s number one quality newspaper website? Of course..

April 26 should be interesting..

The online attention span..

My buzzword of the month has been continuous partial attention which I think sums up the state of engagement we now have with many of our readers vs the old days of focused immersion (one of the HBR’s breakthrough ideas for 2007).

Anyway - imagine my surprise when reading the new Poynter Eyetrack survey. Not only do they find that people are actually reading a lot. Their key finding is that online readers read a greater per centage of a story than print readers (77% online vs 62% for broadsheets and 57% for tabloids), and nearly 2/3 of online readers read all of a story they selected.

They then split the readers into two types - methodical and scanners - and guess what..pretty similar results at article level.

There’s a write up here and you can get a .pdf of the launch presentation here.

Monomania in action…

I’m sure someone with a more sophisticated approach to online reputation management would have actually planned this, but I’m pleased to see that a Google search for Britain’s number one quality newspaper (and a number of variations on that theme) now gives my post on the topic.
Exactly who would make such a search and why, I have no idea…but there you go.

Small earthquake in Belgium, no-one hurt

OK, so there are essays a-plenty re: Google and Belgium, and all the coverage you could ever need over at Search Engine Land. The world hasn’t changed. There are still appeals to go. Let’s not get over excited. But, I think the final bit of John Battelle’s FAQ puts it in context.

Q. So this is all about renegotiating the relationship between traditional media companies, their distribution networks, and the role of search in the new media landscape?

A. Yup.

And obviously I realised the whole case was a travesty after reading Rachel Whetstone’s explanation on the Google Blog. But I think things are getting a little more complex than this oft repeated Google mantra

We believe search engines are of real benefit to publishers because they drive valuable traffic to their websites. If publishers do not want their websites to appear in search results, technical standards like robots.txt and metatags enable them automatically to prevent the indexation of their content.


OK well, We believe that publishers are of real benefit to search engines because they provide valuable content for them to sell ads against. We also believe that when it comes to a news product - the timely use of even a headline and first par is actually a significant part of a story….but that is another matter.
It would be interesting if there was a spare academic/ economist out there to do some real number crunching and actually start to evaluate the mutual dependencies between content providers and searchengines/ aggregators and quantify the benefits each brings to the other, rather then rely on an endless stream of assertions on both sides. But until that day, it’s boom time for lawyers, methinks..

Britain’s number one quality newspaper website. Oh really?

UPDATE 31 JAN: I have now added some Hitwise data which shows that even by this metric, if you combine our jobs data with the core site (and why wouldn’t you?) - the Telegraph is no longer number 1.

First, apologies for the web-metric-fest that follows. The truth is I am something of a web metrics nerd. It’s not something I ever planned, and it’s not simply part of my slightly geekish tendencies. Given the enormity of the decisions we all have to make at the moment - and the leaps we are often asking advertisers to make, transparent, accurate and well understood metrics are absolutely critical, and all of us in the market have to be very careful about what we use.

Given this, and after a decade of looking at stats in our market, imagine my surprise when I saw a poster campaign from The Telegraph announcing they were the most visited UK quality newspaper website - based (as it explains in the teeny weeny small print barely visible on a 48-sheet poster) on some Hitwise stats for Jul - Sep 06. And their site now carries the legend ‘Britain’s number one quality newspaper website’).

Initially, I thought this was just a marketing wheeze - just to put themselves back in the frame. But word gets back that they really believe it. There has been a complaint to the ASA (not from me, I should add), and ultimately it will be their call whether this is legal honest and decent etc. But, in the meantime, I think it probably makes most sense to have a look at the figures in a bit of detail here and let people make their own mind up.

And yes before I get going, the big question is does it matter anyway? But I’ll get to that at the end.

View 1: Nielsen NetRatings

Given the fact that we don’t all audit our UK users every month (see below) the best way to get comparative data is to go to Nielsen, Comscore of Hitwise. There is plenty written on the difference between them (user centric vs network centric if you’re inerested). My personal view is that the absolute numbers from all these services are less than the sense of proportion and general trends they show in the market. So, let’s see what they say.

We are not a Nielsen client, so thank you to a kind friend for providing me with this. But this is their view of UK reach among the main newspaper sites.

Neilsenstats

Which I think gives a slightly different picture. In fact, the sense of proportion between us is pretty much much the picture that anyone who operates in this market (including I expect News International) knows to be true. But Nielsen might be flawed. So let’s take another view.

View 2: Comscore

Now we are a Comscore client - frankly because we feel their panel has both the right scale (around 29,000) and takes the most scrupulous approach to weighting (in other words to ensure that their data is representative of the audience as a whole, rather than simply aggregating ISP data as Hitwise does). Again, they focus only on UK users (for the purpose of this chart anyway), and importantly they have very good penetration with ad agencies.. So let’s take a slightly longer view of what’s happening in our market.

Comscore

OK. so this goes back to June 05. And what does it show? Well yes, we’re still quite some way ahead although the Sun over took us briefly in June (World Cup? Big Brother?). The Times has shown steady growth. And the Telegraph? Well, their UK reach has actually gone down quite steadily since March 06.

Now, we can debate the comparative figures and methodologies between Nielsen/ Comscore and Hitwise etc till the cows come home. But I think that if we’re talking about the proportion of audience (and let’s not forget that is the most important thing in normal matters), again, the general order is ourselves, The Times/ Sun (they can argue that one out inside News International), and then The Telegraph.

View 3: The ABCe

But what about the ABC, I hear you ask? Well this is going to be a little trickier - partly because the Telegraph doesn’t get an audit every month. And also because at the moment, no-one gets their UK audience or traffic broken out from the total in their audit.

Now, I’ll show you what we publicly state about UK/ international audience in a minute - but it’s probably worth going through the audits in a bit of detail to see what they show us.

Monthly unique users


Monthlyuniques

First the long term view on unique users. (We only started auditing them monthly in the middle of last year) Well, when the Telegraph last got an audit they were up to around 6m, about 2m behind the Times and at about half of Guardian Unlimited.

Monthly page impressions


Monthlypages

Yes, yes - the page impression is dead. But it provides a sanity check against the user figures. Perhaps we have all those users, but The Telegraph has a smaller much more loyal gang. Well, it’s quite hard to read this one, as the Telegraph reports too infrequently for Excel to draw a line, but the answer seems to be not. It shows that the Times and Telegraph are both hovering at around 60m page impressions, again, about half of Guardian Unlimited. Interesting that their users have gone up, but traffic has stayed flat.

Daily unique users


Dailyuniques

I’ve included this because it’s an often ignored part of the ABCe certificate. What if the Telegraph actually had more people coming in every day, but a very low churn rate (ie the same 6m) while the Guardian and/ or Times had a relatively low number each day, but very high churn (ie a completely different 400,000 every day for 30 days). Well, actually that’s not the case. Yes, on a good Sunday the Times might beat us - but on the whole the spread of users throughout the month is consistent .

Actually, I think we should be using these figures much more often. For the record, the average daily user figures (perhaps the closest we can get to a print ABC) are:

Guardian 750,794
Times 476,255
Telegraph 350,536

Obviously, you might want to check those figures as a proportion of newspaper ABC to see how effectively a brand has projected itself online. But, that’s for another time.

But what about the UK?

OK - so, on our advertising information site, we break out both our UK traffic and users - they are as follows for Dec 06 (and let’s remember Dec is never a great month).

Total traffic 116,430,102
UK Traffic: 49,060,020
Total Users: 13,168,126
UK Users 4,206,160

Yes, the sharp eyed among you will notice that the UK numbers aren’t audited - but frankly these days the %age difference between our internal stats and final audit tends to be within a fraction of a %age point, so they are there or there abouts.

Perhaps the Telegraph does the same? Tragically not - in fact their ad site is a little too out of date to be of much use in this (strangely, their site is down as I’m typing this - but fortunately I took a screen grab last night)

Picture 6

Similarly, the Times (almost as out of date) ad site doesn’t break out their UK audience either

So let’s look at the US data

So, if there was someway that the Telegraph had more UK visitors than us, one way to check would be to see that they have an exceptionally low volume of US audience and therefore a disproportionately high (ie 80% plus) UK audience. Now, if only there was an easy way to look at this. Oh, did I hear someone mention Quantcast? This compares the Guardian, Times and Telegraph with the NYTimes and LATimes (partly to sanity check, partly to adjust the scale and avoid this mess)

Quantcast
Well, looking at this table of activity over the last year and looking at our individual pages (Guardian , Times, Telegraph ) it seems our US audience is pretty much in proportion with overall activity - in fact, some days the Times beats us and yes, the Telegraph isn’t that far off on some days. So - lacking in US audience they certainly are not.

The wrong type of users?

Ah yes, but perhaps we should be talking about quality, rather than quantity of users. OK, so why don’t we look at Forrester’s survey of Affluent internet consumers from September 2006.

Picture 9

This shows two things - first the top newspapers read by these affluent online consumers, and next the websites they use. Perhaps things have changed since September 2006 - but as this falls into the same period that the Telegraph were promoting in their advertising, it is still relevant to our overall story.

So what about the Hitwise stats and that number one claim?

So, let’s get down to the data in question. This measures proportion of visits - not the number of users. Having seen the table (I am waiting for another friend to provide one I can put up here) yes, The Telegraph did come at the top of the list, although The Guardian site on hitwise is broken into bits (Jobs gets a different line, for example - while the Telegraph is all bundled together), put all our stuff together and I suspect the lead is marginal at best . and you find that the Telegraph is no longer number one. Their share is 5.23% while ours is 5.7%. This is for a different period (30 days to 20/1/07) - but a) it was the true story while the posters were running and b) I doubt there is that much of an overall shift in trend between periods.

But more importantly, I think that if you look at the stats provided above, they’re probably taking things just a teeny bit too far to start calling themselves the UK’s number one quality newspaper website. On any front.

I should add - I don’t think we have any God-given right to being number one for ever. I know that everyone within Guardian Unlimited is all too aware of that - and we continue to improve and innovate: editorially, technically and commercially. Maybe the Telegraph will fly past us and the Times. Maybe the Times will rocket ahead. But not if we can prevent it. And the data shows no sign that it has happened yet.

So what?

So what indeed, I hear you ask. Well, some general points.

1. In the grand scheme of things it doesn’t matter
Actually, while there’s nothing the UK newspaper market likes more than a good old scrap, this sort of tussle between old enemies is sort of irrelevant in this new media landscape. First because advertisers buy campaigns - not the entire audited audience. But Second and more important, because we are all much smaller fish in a much bigger ocean. Two things I think will really matter.
* Putting in place the strategies to start to see the sort of growth levels being experience by non-newspaper sites
* Genuine understanding of the unique nature of our audiences - across print, online and whatever other media we inhabit in the future.
* Offering smart commercial solutions that make the best use of all available channels.

2. Auditing less than monthly is shocking
I don’t think I need to go into this. I suspect the Telegraph will move to monthly audits very quickly given how seriously they now take this medium. Monthly audits will mean that we can compare independently verified stats on actual usage of our site (as opposed to panel based activity). And frankly, we should really be talking about average daily figures, not aggregate monthlies (a trend started in the early days of the web, when we needed to make our user figures seem big enough within our organisations).

3. UK figures need to be broken out
Why not? Surely no-one’s hiding anything. Basically I don’t think anyone can disagree with the fact that more transparency should be a good thing. I look forward to both the Times and Telegraph telling us regularly how much of their traffic and user base is from the UK.

4. As an industry, we’ve agreed on users. Let’s stick with it.
There is little that’s perfect about measuring Unique Users. It’s not the same as people. But we have all (including the Telegraph, indirectly) agreed through Jicwebs that audited unique users are the way forward. At least it is consistent and frankly, our industry looks a shambles if we keep hopping from one metric to the other just because it suits us.

Perhaps we should start shouting about the fact that we have (at the time of writing) some 32,000 inbound links to our blogs compared to the 5,000 for the Telegraph’s. But no, that would be too petty by half.

Anyway - if you’ve made it this far well done. I will go back to blogging about rural life in Surrey very shortly.

Old grapples with new

Three things in my in-box, all intertwined.

The American Journalism Review on the relationship between blogs and journalism. (and the resulting tension)

Washington Post on Gannett’s hyper local activities (and the resulting tension)

New York Times on 07 ad forecasts: good for online, not so hot for other media.

Digital Micro-markets: Google - $31bn local winner?

You can join the dots yourself, really..