Reuters reports on digital news
MARK LYNDERSAY
THE REUTERS Institute Digital News Report 2018 is available online, both as a PDF and as a dynamic website (digitalnewsreport.org).
Some of the findings reflect overall stability in the annual experience with digital news, but publishers, both large and small, should be attentive to new trends that are changing digital news consumption.
Social media falters
According to Nic Newman, research associate for the Reuters Institute, “We find that the move to distributed content via social media and aggregators has been halted – or is even starting to reverse.”
Social media use for news grew from 27 per cent in 2013 to a peak of 51 per cent, but slid to 45 per cent in 2017.
This may change as platforms answer (or fail to answer) the challenge of adjusting their algorithms to deliver news and filter chaff from user feeds.
The rise of private messaging
Other networks have grown as news distribution systems. WhatsApp use for news distribution has tripled since 2014 and finds particularly strong purchase in countries with citizen freedom issues.
Private messaging, including Facebook’s own Messenger, are percieved as being more personal forums for discussion as well as being a more private gathering of “real friends.”
The battle for the Lock Screen
Mobile news alerts delivered to smartphone lock screens are emerging as an important frontier in news delivery. This initiative is being stymied somewhat by the fact that some users apparently have no idea how the news gets there.
Expect a greater push by major publishers to get their news alerts into this space as well as a concerted effort to educate news consumers on how to configure their lock screen alerts.
Revenue
Advertising revenue remains stable, which is to say inadequate and is being undermined by low rates of return and fraud. Ad blocker use is also on the rise.
Efforts at raising donations or acquiring subscribers depend on a news organisation’s ability to convey to readers both the value of journalism and the financial challenges of delivering news online.
Reuters found that 68 per cent of respondents are unaware of the challenges of the news industry and believe that digital news organisations are profitable.
Just ten per cent were aware that digital newspapers are generally loss-making enterprises.
Where do people read?
The smartphone is the second rated touchpoint for news consumption, with 62 per cent of respondents using the devices for news, just behind computers at 64 per cent. In most nations, smartphone reach has doubled over the last six years.
There is a dominant preference for text over video, but in most Asian nations, video is a growing preference.
Up to nine per cent of respondents are using voice-activated speakers such as Amazon’s Echo and 43 per cent of those users search for current news using the devices, with weather reports leading those queries.
The rise of the podcast
One in ten voice-activated speaker owners will listen to podcasts using the device.
That’s just one metric in the growth of the podcast as a medium for delivering news and information to consumers.
The New York Times produces its Daily Podcast; a 20-minute audio briefing that’s been downloaded 100 million times. The BBC delivers hundreds of podcasts, most reformatted from radio broadcasts.
A third of the Reuters poll sample listens to a podcast at least monthly and the ease of streaming audio to a modern smartphone offer a distinct opportunity for even more explosive growth.
Print publications will need to start thinking about audio production to extend their reach on new devices to reach listeners with time to hear but not read and with a distinct preference to consume information on their own schedule.
Mark Lyndersay is the editor of technewstt.com. An expanded version of this column can be found there
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"Reuters reports on digital news"