html5-img
1 / 62

Creating Brand to Grow Readership

Creating Brand to Grow Readership. NAA-ASNE Conventions April, 2002 The Readership Institute A joint venture of NAA, ASNE and The Media Management Center. Newspaper Readership Among the Adult U.S. Population. Source: Newspaper Association of America. Newspaper Readership Trends.

kail
Download Presentation

Creating Brand to Grow Readership

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Creating Brand to Grow Readership NAA-ASNE Conventions April, 2002 The Readership Institute A joint venture of NAA, ASNE and The Media Management Center

  2. Newspaper Readership Among the Adult U.S. Population Source: Newspaper Association of America Newspaper Readership Trends

  3. Agenda • Report on brand project • What does your brand say to your readers? • Focus on light readers • Find relevant, important experience for light readers • Four brand concepts • Update • Think About It & Debatables • Guide • Enrichment • RI going forward • Advertising content and project • Change culture & RBS across media

  4. Readership Institute (RI) studied 37,000 consumers Results in 4 cornerstones that apply toeverynewspaper… … ofevery size

  5. 4 Cornerstones of Readership • Content • 9 types of content grow readership • A particular kind of local news • Content that is “easy to read” & navigable • Content that is promoted in the newspaper • Advertising content that grows readership • Service excellence • Constructive culture • Power of brand to grow readership

  6. What Does Your Brand Say to Your Readers?

  7. Brand in Newspapers • Newspapers can have a strong brand • New York Times & Wall Street Journal • Out of 100 papers, RI found 6 local dailies that had a modestly distinctive brand • Most leaders admit brand receives little attention • It’s difficult to make it actionable • Brand grows readership • This isan enormous opportunity

  8. What Newspaper Brand Isn’t • It is not the paper’s logo or motto: • All the news that's fit to print • The nation’s newspaper • Beyond words • We know where you live • We deliver • It’s what you need to read • Every day since 1829 (NYT) (USA Today)

  9. What Newspaper Brand Isn’t • Effective newspaper branding is not more marketing • Before you can effectively market, you have to have: • Relevant, differentiated content • A concept that goes beyond brand perception

  10. What Newspaper Brand Is • Effective newspaper branding: • Creates relevant, important experience to the reader

  11. RBS Reader Behavior Score Content: News & Adv. Brand Perception Service Excellence Readership Brand Model Relevant, important experience to the reader

  12. Measuring Readership • RI measured readers’ usage of their newspaper on weekdays and weekends • Readership is: • Time spent • Frequency • Completeness • RI rolled those three into single Reader Behavior Score (RBS) for each consumer

  13. RI Focus on Light Readers

  14. Newspaper Partners • Herald-Sun • Durham, North Carolina • News & Observer • Raleigh, North Carolina • Journal Times • Racine, Wisconsin • Journal Sentinel • Milwaukee, Wisconsin

  15. Two Ambitious RI Goals • Make brand actionable for newspapers • Use brand to grow RBS for a special set of consumers • Others dealt with brand for all readers • RI focused on newspapers’ future: • Light readers, 20 - 45 years old • Household income $35,000+ • Education of high school or above

  16. % % % % % % % % % 21-25 Year Olds (% Reading Daily) Source: General Social Survey 2002

  17. 4 Myths About Light Readers Myth #1: ‘Light’ and ‘occasional’ readers are the same • Many light readers read regularly & are best candidates to become heavier readers • Frequency is only one measure of readership • Time spent & completeness are also important

  18. 4 Myths About Light Readers Myth #2: Light readers want light content • They are just as educated, affluent and serious as heavy readers • They get information from many sources

  19. 4 Myths About Light Readers Myth #3: Serving light readers means abandoning heavy readers • Heavy and light readers share a lot of the same interests • 4 out of 5 top content opportunities are the same for both groups • Approaches that appeal to light readers do not antagonize heavy readers

  20. 4 Myths About Light Readers Myth #4: There aren’t very many light readers • You’ve got two light readers for every one of your heavy readers

  21. Types of Readers • Non-readers or readers of another newspaper (28%) • Heavy readers (21%) • Light readers (51%): • Selectives (6%) • Skimmers (11%) • Sunday/weekday sometimes (8%) • Sunday heavy (6%) • Light selectives (10%) • Weekday only (3%) • Sunday only light (7%)

  22. Who are Light Readers? • These readers are not us

  23. Light Readers’ Mindset • I feel drowned by the news • I already know what’s going on without the newspaper • The paper repeats yesterday’s radio or TV news • Too much news is depressing, uninteresting or a waste of time

  24. Meeting Light Readers’ Needs • Think how different your paper would have to be if you felt that way about it

  25. Find Relevant, Important Experience for Light Readers

  26. Process to Find Relevance • Across the USA, RI interviewed light, younger readers about the relevance of the newspaper to them • Your newspaper was not a relevant, important experience in their lives

  27. Process, cont. • RI synthesized those findings into 20+ possible brand ideas to change their newspaper experience • Tested those ideas with other light readers

  28. Process, cont. • RI developed four brand concepts from those interviews • Created and tested prototypes of the concepts • 4 concepts made newspaper a relevant, important experience for light readers

  29. Four Brand Concepts • Update • Quickly show the key stories that matter most to me • Think About It • Debatables • Guide • Guide to ideas, news, places to go … • Enrichment • I’m smarter ... I’m in the know …

  30. 4 Concepts for Light Readers • 4 brand concepts may look like what you’ve seen or do, but suspend judgment: • Concepts have potential to change your light readers’ experience with your newspaper

  31. Update

  32. The Effect of Update • Update appeals to broadest range of light readers • Update lets me make it my newspaper • I already know the basics of the news • I use Update to track news I care about • I use it to manage the news • I use Update to dig deeper into stories I care about and skip the ones I don’t

  33. Update on the Front Page • If I have to open the newspaper to find Update, the experience is lost • If Update is inside: • It’s the same old newspaper • I have to waste time digging for things • Update is my connection to the paper • It’s not just an item or index

  34. Think About It

  35. The Effect of Think About It • Think About It are stories that: • Arouse my curiosity • Make me see the larger question behind the story • Realize that it’s not one side or the other • Make me think or wonder • I want to think about them and discuss or debate them with friends

  36. Guide

  37. The Effect of Guide • My paper sends me to places where I can add to story or experience it • If I want more, it points me to other media • I already use those media • Guide helps in that endeavor • It adds to the stories in the newspaper

  38. Enrichment

More Related