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Howard Owens is a digital media pioneer. He started publishing local news online in 1995 when very few local news outlets had web sites. The header image on the site depicts the film camera he used early in his career and the press pass from his year on the staff of the Carlsbad Journal. For more on Howard's professional background, read his LinkedIn profile.
HowardOwens.com is the personal web site of Howard Owens and covers his range of interests -- political localism and libertarianism, music and personal interests, as well as his professional interests.
Howard is currently publisher of The Batavian and lives in Batavia, N.Y.
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Daily Archives: October 19, 2006
How well are newspaper.com sites doing at extending reach?
The other day when I looked at the NAA’s NadBASE site, and glanced at the spreadsheet charting how newspaper Web sites extend local audience reach, I was curious — what newspapers are doing the best at extending reach?
I’m no statistician — didn’t even take the course in college — so maybe my methodology is full of holes, but I just dumped the table into a spreadsheet and calculated the differential of the percentage of total reach minus newspaper penetration for the given DMA.
Total reach is measured by Scarborough Research through surveys and is based on a “visit within the past 30 days” metric, which I think is of dubious value, but it is how these things are being measured. Scarborough claims this is unduplicated, extended, local reach.
If my methodology or logic is flawed, I invite somebody else to take a stab at establishing the same comparison.
If my calculations are right, the average newspaper.com extends the reach of the newspaper by a differential of 3.3 points.
Here are the Top 10 performers, based on this math:
| Austin American-Statesman | 9.20 |
| Atlanta Journal-Constitution | 7.40 |
| Tampa Tribune | 7.20 |
| Seattle Times/ Post-Intelligencer (JOA) | 6.50 |
| Boston Globe | 6.20 |
| San Diego Union-Tribune | 6.10 |
| Virginian-Pilot | 6.00 |
| Arizona Republic | 5.60 |
| Hartford Courant | 5.40 |
| Birmingham News | 5.20 |
At the bottom of the pile are mostly suburban newspapers in fragmented markets, so maybe expecting stronger performances isn’t realistic, but for what it’s worth, here’s the bottom 10.
| Santa Rosa Press Democrat | 0.20 |
| Journal News (New York) | 0.40 |
| Morning Call (Allentown) | 0.40 |
| Record (Bergen County) | 0.50 |
| Los Angeles Newspaper Group | 0.70 |
| Daytona Beach News-Journal | 0.70 |
| Los Angeles Daily News | 1.00 |
| New Haven Register | 1.10 |
| Orange County Register | 1.10 |
| Patriot-News (Harrisburg) | 1.20 |
Again, FWIW, and I welcome comments, corrections, feedback on the comparisons, but it seems to me that if one paper reaches 55 percent of the market in print, and 58 percent combined, and other is 18 and 20 and another 45 and 53, there is some comparative value in just subtracting one number from the other and seeing who has the better differential. And if it does, maybe we should be trying to learn all we can from the sites that are beating industry averages by wide margins.
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