http://printinthemix.com/fastfacts/show/403
On a website called Print in the Mix - A Clearinghouse of Research on Print Media Effectiveness, it is proclaimed that "Community Newspapers Continue to Show Strong Readership". I grew up in a small town, and weekly got the Messenger/Star-Forum to peruse. More on that, later.
There is a weekly community paper in my metropolitan area, and it likely covers 30,000 people. With an unscientific observation, the most readership it gets is the search for the 2-for1 coupon for The Prairie House restaurant.
Here are the leading points from the survey:
The early data indicate that the positive findings are consistent with the earlier surveys:
- 73 percent of those surveyed read a community newspaper each week.
- Those readers, on average, share their paper with 3.34 persons.
- They spend about 37.5 minutes reading their local newspapers.
- 78 percent read most or all of their community newspapers.
- 41 percent keep their community newspapers six or more days (shelf life).
- 62 percent of readers read local news very often in their community newspapers, while 54 percent say they never read local news online (only 9 percent say they read local news very often online).
- interviews completed with residents that lived in areas where the local newspapers had a circulation of 8,000 or less
- the number of non-daily newspapers that have a functional website serving small towns and cities may be lower than that of daily newspapers
- the average age of the 2010 respondents (51.2)
What are the dominant items in a weekly like the Messenger/Star-Forum ? Pictures. Photos of folks in town, winning awards and having events. Personal news of graduations and weddings. A little local news about the government. New business openings are there, but never the closings unless it's the big factory. It is a rare small paper that has a good online version of the weekly publication; it is hard enough to get the paper out on time with the limited advertising of a small town.
Where else do you see this same stuff? Facebook! The average age surveyed was over 50, meaning that half the folks are 50 and over. I would be very curious about the results for 39 and younger.
Advertise in the local paper, but do it soon, and aim for the 50+ crowd. The rest of the audience is going elsewhere and fast.