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Is Print Finally Dead? READ ALL ABOUT IT!

8 March 2010 by Stefan Swanepoel Please wait View Comments
Is Print Finally Dead? READ ALL ABOUT IT!

December 2009 saw the demise of Editor & Publisher Magazine, which had been around since 1854. It lays claim to being the chief chronicler of the American newspaper industry and has presided over the business for 125 years and is a clear signal that an era is rapidly drawing to a close.

NEWSPAPERS

Daily newspapers have been losing between 2% and 5% per year of their circulation base during the last 10 years. In 1940 there were 1,878 newspapers in the U.S. with a total circulation of 32.4 million. While the number of newspapers continued to decline — 1,611 in 1990 — their circulation increased: 62.6 million in 1990. But by 2008 the number of newspapers had dropped again by a little over 200 to 1,408 while circulation crashed down to 49.2 million.

In the first half of 2009 alone another 105 newspapers closed their doors — 10,000 jobs were lost. Even among the leader board 23 of the top 25 newspapers suffered between 7% and 20% declines in circulation this year (the worst slump since the Depression), and advertising revenue could be down as much as a 30% for 2009 when all the data is finalized.

One of the most critical statistics revealed that only 27% of Gen Y read a newspaper, compared with 55% of the Silent or Greatest Generation. And as the consumers change so do their preferences so other print related industries as well.

MAGAZINES

There are no reliable industry-wide magazine ad revenue numbers that are publicly reported (for obvious reasons), but according to a report compiled by The Magazine Publishers of America’s Publishers Information Bureau, automotive ads for the first six months of 2009 were down 21.3% and technology down 17.5%.

MAIL

The number of pieces of first class mail has steadily decreased and according to CEO Pat Donahoe, the USPS estimates a decline of 10 billion pieces in each of the next two years, dropping from a high of 213 billion pieces in 2006 to 170 billion in 2010. They are trying to cut costs in all areas to stop the bleeding: asking Congress to authorize reducing mail delivery to five days a week (approval unlikely), offering buyouts to 30,000 workers in 2010 to save $500 million and reducing the number of collection boxes across the country, of which in the past 20 years over 200,000 have vanished, more than the 175,000 that still remain.

SPAM

But it’s not just first class mail that is migrating to the Internet. The junk mail business is moving in that direction as well. Today there are 100 billion pieces of junk mail sent in the U.S. every year and 44% of it is discarded, unopened. Consumers respond to only 2% of all the junk mail sent and as a result one of the biggest producers of junk mail — the banking industry — has made getting out of the mail a high priority. Meanwhile it is estimated that 200 billion spam emails are sent every day.

DIECT MAIL

Revenue from direct mail is also expected to fall from $48.7 billion in 2008 to $29.8 billion in 2013 — a decline of 39% — dropping it from the #1 ad revenue generator to #4, behind the Internet, broadcast TV and newspapers. In a mid-2009 study, Anthea Stratigos, CEO of Outsell, Inc., a media research and advisory outlet, predicted that $65 billion would be siphoned away from traditional advertising channels in 2009 and be spent on companies’ own websites and Internet marketing.

The Shift in Real Estate Marketing

The Shift in Real Estate Marketing

THE SHIFT

According to Pew Research, fewer than half of Americans (43%) say that if their local newspaper closed it would hurt their community “a lot,” and even fewer (33%) say they would personally miss reading the paper. Over 68% indicated that they get their news from local television or television websites, 48% from print, 34% from radio and 31% from the Internet.

INTERNET

Ninety trillion emails were sent in 2009 – that’s 247 billion per day. Twitter send 27 million tweets per day, You Tube serves up one billion videos per day and Facebook enjoys 260 billion page views per month. No wonder the Internet is redefining every industry, including real estate brokerage. Real estate professionals have to redefine what they do and how they do; where they find their customer and how they stay in contact with them.

Many progressive Realtors® have and continue to adapt every day uncovering new ways to use the Internet in their profession. However hundreds of thousands if Realtors® still remain stuck in a paradigm that is dead. The jury is still out on how many will survive and how many will retire over the course of the next few years.

READ ALL ABOUT IT

The changing arena of real estate marketing is but one of the key trends detailed by Stefan Swanepoel in the 2010 edition of his Swanepoel Trends Report. The 172-page annual report (www.RETrends.com) was published in February and is a must read for all Realtors® and real estate professionals.

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  • Great article. I have been reading more and more articles similar to this one these days. I say, no wonder everything is moving online. There is no paper waste, everything is real time, and it is "free" to share the information. It will be interesting to see not only how the Real Estate industry reacts to these changes but business in general.
  • Stefan:

    Great post, and the print media (magazines) has responded with their side of the story. We were astounded that the younger generation is reading magazines and the average time is 45mns, and that subscriptions are growing. We really think that there has been a culling in the herd of print, however print will still be a integral part of a balanced marketing approach when it comes to real estate.
  • I presented at South Africa's first online real estate conference in Cape Town this week and the view from all industry experts is that online is the way to go for the real estate industry.
    I share the view that print is dead and should be used for branding purposes to drive your clients online.
  • Thanks for comments everyone. This same discussion exploded on ActiveRain with over 150 comments.

    To follow this thread visit http://activerain.com/blogsvie...

    Stefan
  • I would agree that most media, especially print has seen some demise, but I would also argue that so long as there is older generations, print media will hold some significance... I appreciated the stats, thanks.
  • Dennis
    Daily papers seemed to suffering but the article didn't supply any information on weekly local newspapers. Those paper seem to be thriving. Because they are free they rely on advertisers for support and in an effort to reach those consumers in the neighborhood where the business' are located they are switching to these smaller papers. The great thing about these smaller papers is they run advertorials about real estate companies and agents when they are doing community efforts like fundraising for charity etc. Because it is helping out in the local community the company doesnt even need to buy an ad. Some smaller papers will insist you run an ad but you still get double coverage for the price of one ad. Most daily papers require a contract to run advertorials. Papers need to localize more and get away from the national and international news. Most people get those two from the Internet and TV. They need to put features not available on the web in the daily paper. Give people a reason to buy the paper. Lower the cost back to a quarter.
  • Hi Greg,

    Thanks for comments. One sentence drew my attention… “Whilst I see print media growing in importance with the upcoming roll out of the iPad…”

    Please share more on your thoughts regarding the iPad.

    Stefan
  • Stefan, its going to be some very interesting times ahead for those agents that don't embrace technology quickly enough. Whilst I see print media growing in importance with the upcoming roll out of the iPad, I think agents will need to look very closely at what they are really trying to achieve with any off line strategy.

    Offline media should be used to drive people online, but if the agents don't use effective online conversion strategies then any offline marketing campaign will simply be a waste of money anyway.
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