The author of the review is Katherine Page, media research consultant, who was commissioned by the Print & Digital Research Forum (PDRF).
Integrating print and digital audience estimates
Katherine Page found that the principal developments during the last two years have been a move towards integrating print and digital audience estimates into a single database, and trying to keep pace with the increasing number of platforms and devices used to access publisher content. The aim has been to provide publishers with a measurement of total brand reach across all platforms, and the ability to carry out detailed analyses of advertising campaigns, through reach and frequency planning software.
Most of the 161 surveys do now include some measure of digital reading alongside and in combination with print readership estimates. That said, there is a great variety of ways in which this is achieved, some more advanced than others.
The largest group of surveys is those which rely on respondents’ recall of their visits to publishers’ websites. This can be a useful starting point for having some information put into the market on digital reading of publisher brands, but as Page commented “it is difficult for participants to remember (or even know) the full scope of their digital activity, particularly occasional or one-off visits”.
A second group of surveys, 21 in all, are using sophisticated data integration techniques to combine the print readership study with external data on website audiences measured automatically by passive methods. Thus the external data does not rely on human memory but records actual behaviour. Common sources for the external website data are comScore and Nielsen, but there are others too such as TGI Clickstream – for example the China National Resident Survey (CNRS) integrates TGI Clickstream digital data into the print survey. In Australia the EMMA survey uses fusion methods to incorporate Nielsen website audience information into the published resource. Among other surveys which use various integration methods are the Estudio Nacional de Lectoria in Ecuador, Consumer Media View in Thailand, SNA Focus in Romania, Media Atlas China in China, and Peru’s Estudio Nacional de Lectoria.
These fusion or calibration methods are a big advance. However they are not without limitations. As Page writes, “a particular concern is the ability to reflect adequately the duplication of readership between print and digital platforms”. If the print and digital duplications which emerge from the fusions are not realistic, the estimates of total brand footprint will not be realistic. I have been conscious of this myself in my work in Britain with the National Readership Survey’s PADD (Print And Digital Database). For magazines, especially those with niche audiences, producing credible duplication patterns has been a real concern.
This leads on to the third, newest and smallest group of surveys: those designed specifically to facilitate integration of print and online reading. These have a single-source component in which some respondents have their internet surfing measured passively (instead of recall) as well as answering questions on their print reading; this yields very high-quality duplication data between the platforms.
The few examples include the MACH Basic study in Switzerland and The One survey in France. What I am most familiar with is the forthcoming AMP (Audience Measurement for Publishers) survey in Britain, with which I am working. To be launched in 2016, there will be three interlocking principal elements:
I anticipate that more national audience surveys will evolve into this third group in the coming years, the main constraint being the cost. It must be seen as a vital investment in the future of content publishing.
Digital editions
An increasing number of surveys are now reporting audiences to digital editions of magazines and newspapers, either on their own or built into the estimates for the print edition. It has to be said that more newspaper than magazine digital editions are covered because of the generally larger audiences of the newspaper products, making them more practical to measure on grounds of having sufficient sample size.
For example, in Spain the EGM survey (Estudio General de Medios) is now measuring digital editions for all print brands. Among the surveys reporting only on newspaper digital editions are Norway’s Forbruker & Media, Ecuador’s Estudio de Lectoria, Italy’s Audipress, and France’s The One survey.
Increase in online interviewing
Another trend identified in the Katherine Page review was an increase in online interviewing during the last two years. A number of national readership surveys have been relaunching or undergoing major change in which there is a switch from personal interviewing to online interviews – either totally, or in part. Examples include the MA Media Analyse in Austria, the Print & Digital Audience Measurement in Canada, the Roy Morgan Single Source in New Zealand, and two surveys in Slovenia – the NRB and the Target Group Index.
Nevertheless it is still a minority of national readership surveys which use significant proportions of online interviewing (about a fifth of surveys), compared with personal interviews accounting for about 60%. Online interviewing is, in general, less expensive than personal face to face interviews, but the big problem which online methods must overcome is to recruit a truly representative sample.
Measuring specific issue readership
The great majority of national readership surveys measure reading by means of the Recent Reading method – that is, questions of the general form “When did you last read a copy of…?”
However, there are now four surveys which currently use or are about to use the Specific Issue Readership (SIR) method for magazines. With this, respondents are shown the front covers of the most recent issues of the magazine (for example, the last six issues), and are asked which if any of those issues they have read. There are several arguments in favour of this method, and several against, but one of the most significant advantages in my view is that SIR automatically provides a realistic measure of the rate at which readership of an issue accumulates through time. In most readership surveys this is a missing element, but readership accumulation should be a vital part of planning advertising campaigns and demonstrating the effectiveness of magazine advertising.
The four studies using SIR are Magascene in Japan, EMMA in Australia, NOM in The Netherlands, and the forthcoming AMP in Britain.
Some country by country developments
Few of the 161 surveys in Katherine Page’s review are standing still. The majority are introducing new developments of some kind, as publishers respond to several pressures: from advertisers to prove the size and nature of print audiences, and the value of print advertising; demands for higher technical standards in audience measurement; or in response to the advance of digital reading.
Here is a taste of the variety of developments in the last two years:
Readership research continues to adapt and evolve in response to the changing world of publishing. It is notable that these developments are speeded up by the exchange of information between practitioners and between countries – an exchange facilitated by organisations such as the Print & Digital Research Forum, FIPP, and magazine national associations (among others). The Katherine Page review every two years is a significant element in this productive process.