The launch of Locally Connected, the UK’s first integrated
print and online audience currency, has revealed that local media
websites increase the unduplicated reach of regional and local
newspapers within their circulation areas by 14%, particularly
among upmarket and core middle age groups.
NS president David Fordham, told agency
planners, MDs, digital heads, clients, research experts and
publishers at the launch event tonight: “More than 80% of
adults read a local newspaper in print and ironically, at a time
when our revenues have been under such challenge, local media
audiences have been growing across multimedia platforms.” He
said people spend more than half their time within a five-mile
radius of home and are increasingly interested in local news.
“The local paper is still the first place they turn to – in
print and online.”
He added: “The development of a robust and
reliable system of multimedia audience measurement has been one of
the biggest challenges facing all media today. Locally
Connected now gives advertisers a unique cross-media planning
system, allowing them to effectively target local communities
across the UK in print as well as online.”
Daren Rubins, managing director, PHD Media,
welcomed the initiative saying: “Local communities are
fantastically important and what is interesting at the moment is
that most media channels are becoming more national and the
opportunities to actually target on a very bespoke level basis are
becoming few and far between now.”
Daniel Stephenson, head of digital marketing for the
COI, said: “Delivering communications at a post code
level where they’re really tailored to local issues is potentially
very powerful… What is particularly exciting about Locally
Connected is that it’s a tool that will drive up our understanding
of our audiences and in particular their use of newspapers on and
off line.”
The project was instigated in 2006 by the NS, working
alongside JICREG and ABCe with the aim of extending the regional
press readership database to encompass newspapers’ online audiences
and provide agencies and advertisers with a geographical system for
analysing the combined net reach of a newspaper and its website
within circulation areas down to postcode sector level.
NS communications director Lynne Anderson,
who led the project, said “Both buyers and sellers were agreed
on the need to move away from the historic focus on a newspaper’s
paid circulation and towards a more meaningful measurement of total
reach. Agency planners told us their clients were increasingly
looking for multimedia solutions at a local level but that it was
hard to convince them to invest without hard data to back it
up.”
Telmar, the leading international media planning software and
consultancy company, was commissioned by the NS in 2007 to develop
the methodology for integrating internet audience data with print
readership data.
“On average the research shows us that a monthly online
campaign in conjunction with a single advertisement in the
newspaper will increase reach by 14% - and in some cases much
more,” said Dick Dodson, managing director of Telmar
Europe. “This additional reach will be more upmarket
and in the core 25-64 age group since the website audiences are
significantly biased towards these groups compared to the newspaper
audiences.”
The internet audience data are underpinned by audited web
traffic data, survey data (combined sample size of 100,000+ adults)
and statistical analysis and modelling. The NS and JICREG have
worked with publishers, agencies and the IPA to develop and test
the planning tool at each stage of the project. The pioneering
online research work conducted for Trinity Mirror by Survey
Interactive, and also for Northcliffe Media and Johnston Press, has
been a fundamental element of the project.
Lynne Robinson, research director, IPA, said:
“The technical challenge in producing this has been significant
given the scale and granularity of the data required; this has been
achieved by using a unique blend of original research and industry
standard auditing all fused together by rigorous
modelling.”
The work has been independently and positively appraised by
Ken Baker Associates, the respected market research statisticians
who previously appraised IPA’s Touchpoints. They described a
“high level of accuracy” in the modelling and concluded:
“A great deal of expertise has been demonstrated in
constructing this model. Any further modelling on newly available
data sets is likely to improve the model, but improvements will be
small.”
Richard Foan, managing director, ABCe, said:
“I think it’s fantastic that the regional newspaper brands have
delivered self-regulation of accountability for their online
delivery using the industry agreed standards and having the results
independently verified by ABCe, thereby delivering the stamp of
trust that is so important in the digital age.”
Howard Scott, chairman of JICREG, said:
“Locally Connected is a major development for JICREG and local
media audience measurement. It has only been possible because of an
enormous amount of painstaking work by a determined and dedicated
group of people.”
Internet audience data were released alongside print
readership figures in July, with the all-important data showing net
reach of regional and local newspapers and their websites available
from today on the live JICREG planning system.
Audited traffic figures for the largest local media sites are
released by ABCe alongside newspaper circulation data on a
six-monthly basis. JICREG audience figures are updated twice a year
in line with new circulation data and, now, web traffic data.
Building on the Locally Connected work, the NS is now
embarking on a qualitative digital insight projectwhich will look
at how, why, when and for how long people engage with their local
newspaper website and how this differs from other internet usage.
Results from the wanted ads Digital will be available in
early 2010.
Seven of the largest local media groups, representing 70% of
the industry, are part of Locally Connected with more expected to
follow. The groups are: Trinity Mirror, Northcliffe Media, Johnston
Press, Newsquest, Guardian Media Group, Midland News Association
and Iliffe News & Media.