U.S.News & World, the No 3 weekly newsmagazine in U.S., has seen the writing and is among the first to respond to it: it will be dropping to a biweekly frequency starting next year, and has formed a new group called U.S. News Media Group, in an effort to develop more franchises beyond the weekly under it. This leaves Time and Newsweek in the weekly market, though they too have been hammered with circulation and ad page declines. Here's the money quote: "'News' and 'week' becomes an oxymoron," according to Brian Kelly, editor of U.S. News, quoted in this AdAge story. Ad pages year to date have fallen 23.7 percent at Newsweek, 27.2 percent at Time and 32.7 percent at U.S. News, according to MIN. Time reported average paid circulation of nearly 3.4 million for the second half of last year, down 17.6 percent; newsstand sales declined 19.4 percent. Newsweek's average was flat at 3.1 million, including a 16.3 percent decline on newsstands. U.S. News also reported flat circulation, at just over 2 million, as newsstand slipped 7.9 percent. Meanwhile, U.S. News has already trimmed its frequency to 36 issues this year from 46 last year.Heeding To The Oxymoron: U.S. News Killing the Weekly; Focusing On Biweekly and Online
Jun 10, 2008
NEWS: U.S. News Killing the Weekly; Focusing On Biweekly and Online
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts - Tag and Earn More
- Apple on a Roll
- Understanding Facebook for Web 1.0 Users
- eBook, Self-Publishing, Starving Writers Gain Ad-Supported ePublishing
- New Media: The Problem is Monetization, The Solution is $50.00+ eCPM
- Profiling the Internet and Online Advertising
- Contextual, Behavioral, and AI Targeting
- Internet Consolidation or Fragmentation
- New Internet Roles with Social Media
- Blogging Ecosystem of Distribution Gadgets
- SEO or 'Flypaper Effect'
- Reality Television Comes to Journalism - Thy Name is Blogger
- Feeds, Weeds, Reads, and User Needs
- Sex, Money, Power - The Anchor of Social Media
- Forum: Anyone able to earn $100+ eCPM
- Lead Generation, Direct Mail, eMail, Word-of-Mouth, Buzz Marketing, Social Media Compared
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments accepted immediately, but moderated.