Friday, September 21, 2012

The Richer Your Are, The More You Read Print



Should marketers of luxury products be doing more print advertising?
It couldn't hurt. Affluent consumers like hard copy, despite their over indexing for digital-media devices. The new Ipsos MediaCT’s 2012 Mendelsohn Affluent Survey shows that 82% of those with annual
household income of $100,000 or more are reading more print pubs. In particular, affluent women in households that make $100,000 or more annually, and "ultra affluents" (those with household income
$250,000 or more) are heavy print consumers, with the highest reach and number of titles and issues read. Ultra affluents consume approximately 25% more print media than last year, reading an average of 23.5 issues across an average of 10 titles, per the study. And this is happening as affluent consumers have vastly increased their exposure to digital content and platforms. The 2012 Mendelsohn Affluent survey from Ipsos MediaCT found, for example, that 26% of affluent consumers personally own a tablet, and 47% live in a
household with a tablet, a threefold increase versus 2011. More than half now own a smartphone, up from 45% in 2011. The firm found that in 2012, 4.7 million Affluents downloaded a magazine app, nearly doubling from 2.4 million in 2011; seven million downloaded a newspaper app, up from 4.6 million in 2011. Affluents reported using the Internet an average of 37.4 hours weekly -- up 14% from 2011, with the largest growth seen in sites related to social media, entertainment and shopping. 


Steve Kraus, chief research and insights officer for Ipsos MediaCT's Audience Measurement Group, says all of this new digital content isn't making people sick of print content, it's just adding tinder to the fire. "I think that instead being of satiated, consumers are made more hungry for content. We have yet to see the point that people are tired of it. There's real growth in interest. It's a bit like the all-you-can-eat buffet making you hungrier to try something else." He says that among the 24% of Affluents who read at least one of the six national daily newspapers in hard-copy form, the total average issue audience increased by 3.9%, to 11.3 million. He adds that the Affluents and Ultra Affluents also have a particular taste for the kind of content one traditionally finds in national print publications,particularly the major national dailies. "There's this desire for curated content," he says. "Of course you can go on the Internet and get stuff from anywhere, and you don't know the source and quality. So people look to brands for a guide. Affluents have a hunger for content synthesized from multiple sources in a thoughtful way, particularly as there is more and more information out there." That, he says, is driving growth in readership of nationally daily newspapers like The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Financial Times. Kraus says the data has implications for marketers of luxury goods and services. "I think one of the interesting things we have seen about print is that indexes even higher among Ultra Affluents, so true luxury is more of the market here," he says. "The world of luxury is becoming more contacted, and more focused on really high-end folks and they are the ones who read print. And our ad-receptivity measures show print advertising indexes really well because Affluents are consuming it in the time and place where they are open to it." The study also finds that television still ranks first in advertising reach and receptivity among Affluents, with magazines a close second. Almost all affluent consumers the firm surveyed said they had watched TV the prior week, although there was a 4% drop in viewing to an average of 16.9 hours. Affluents also reported watching slightly fewer cable networks.
Kraus says that there was a bigger drop in cable viewing among affluents. "We asked which of the 98 networks they viewed in the prior seven days, and the average number of cable channels dropped a bit, on order of 6%," he says. Almost 60% of Affluents reported listening to radio in the past week, and among those listening, average time spent listening rose 4% to 10.6 hours weekly. – Marketing Daily News – Media Daily News

Monday, September 17, 2012

Prototype of 'smart' newspaper that plays audio is released

Newsprint Interactive project releases print edition of the Lancashire Evening Post with a button to play audio.
A print version of the Lancashire Evening Post has been created with a button to allow readers to press the
newspaper and play audio.
The "smart" newspaper is the latest prototype from an 18-month research project led by the University of Central Lancashire. Called Interactive Newsprint, the project aims to find a way of connecting a print newspaper to the internet, which researchers believe could offer news organizations new ways of discovering
exactly which articles and adverts readers are interested, much in the same way as they gather audience data
from contentviewed online
Paul Egglestone, digital coordinator at the School of Journalism at UCLan and lead on the Interactive Newsprint project, told Journalism.co.uk that the prototype just released will allow the team to carry out
further research. Egglestone and his team released earlier prototypes to demonstrate to the tester communities "what the technology was capable of". The new version will be demoed at the London Design Festival next week. "People can interact with it and we may do some live research," Egglestone said.
The video below demonstrates how readers can click the paper to play audio. The footage shows users listening through wireless headphones as the quality is "better than straight from the paper", Egglestone explained The newspaper sends a signal to a server to play the audio and gathers data on how many people have clicked to listen. The latest prototype created by the researchers marks a "step forward in that it is taking an analogue interaction and creating a digital interaction". The project, which is funded until the end of December, will now look at how people use the latest prototype. Researchers hope to discover whether people "press, tap or scratch a button", Egglestone said. "We'll be getting data on how people interact and can then refine the product before going into the final stage of the project." Egglestone said the final product may not look very different to the one in the above video but will be refined based on this research.
The Interactive Newsprint project is working with citizen press agency Citizenside "to develop a platform with them", Egglestone revealed. The team is also working with community newspaper Blog Preston.
Egglestone also hopes that there may be a sustainable business to be built around developing the analytics.
The team is keen to take the ideas forward beyond the end of the current project. They would like to explore the opportunities for interactions with user-generated content and the possibility of readers being able to submit stories via a print product. - .journalism.co.uk