Weep, moan or cry, but don't show this to PR pros

Daily Newspaper Reading (Print or Online) Down to Two in Five
 
By Jack Loechner
(Research brief from the Center for Media Research)
 
According to the findings of a new Adweek Media/Harris Poll, of 2,136 US adults surveyed online between December 14 and 16, 2009 by Harris Interactive, the era of Americans reading a daily newspaper each and every day is coming to an end.

Just two in five U.S. adults (43%) say they read a daily newspaper, either online or in print almost every day. Just over seven in ten Americans (72%) say they read one at least once a week while 81% read a daily newspaper at least once a month. One in ten adults (10%) say they never read a daily newspaper.

Frequency of Reading Daily Newspaper (% of Age Groups; Base: All U.S. adults)

 

Age Group

Frequency

Total

18-34

35-44

45-54

55+  

At Least Once a Month (Net)

81%

71%

83%

85%

88%

   At Least Once a Week (Subnet)

72

59

72

76

82

Almost every day

43

23

36

44

64

A few times a week

17

19

23

23

10

Once a week

12

18

14

9

9

A few times a month

9

12

10

9

5

A few times a year

9

12

9

9

5

Never

10

17

9

6

7

Source: The Harris Poll, January 2009

One reason for the dying of the daily newspaper, says the report, is the graying of the daily readership. Almost two-thirds of those aged 55 and older say they still read a daily newspaper almost every day. The younger one is, however, the less often they read newspapers. But less than one quarter of those aged 18-34 say they read a newspaper almost every day while 17% in this age group say they never read a daily newspaper.

One potential business model that newspapers are exploring is charging a monthly fee to read a daily newspaper's content online. This model, however, seems unlikely to work, as 77% of online adults say they would not be willing to pay anything to read a newspaper's content online. While some are willing to pay, one in five online adults would only pay between $1 and $10 a month for this online content and only 5% would pay more than $10 a month.

The report concludes that the struggles of the daily newspaper will continue as Americans have more and more ways to find the news content they need and want. The challenge for newspapers will be discovering a way to get their content to people and make money doing so. One area they were intently exploring was charging for online content, though it appears they need to find another way.

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