Could the influence of some UK national newspapers be growing, despite a decline in circulation?
Stephen Davies has compiled a list of year-on-year circulation changes for the nationals at PR Blogger. He argues that the decline in overall circulation is evidence that we should share with clients to prove that they should be looking more at online media. And he’s right.
I also think that alongside analysis of print circulation we need to have stats for newspaper brands’ online performance to hand. How many people download the Telegraph podcast? How many unique visitors does The Times get? What’s the FT‘s subscriber base looking like these days and which countries are they in?
I would argue, for instance, that The Guardian is becoming more influential than ever, given its global online readership. Simon Waldman, its online publisher, discusses its significance here.
If you take a look at Technorati’s analysis of top global media sources on the web, you find The Guardian is 8th (with The Times 14th and The Daily Telegraph 29th).
A good showing for UK papers, to say the least, but also a reminder of their continued and even growing influence on the web.
Recent analyses of major business stories both on blogs and mainstream media online by myself and colleagues showed that wires and global news sites (including the UK titles I mentioned) were initiators of almost all the major stories still. Blogs were important and influential, but as amplifiers – the stories were still started by the nationals.
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