Press Release

CONTACT: Tom Rosenstiel or Mark Jurkowitz of PEJ, 202.419.3650

America's Newspapers: The Search for a New Business Model

New Study Finds Some Papers Succeeding With Digital Revenue; But Many Executives Report Struggle to Change Business Culture

Though the newspaper industry generally is making only halting progress in the search for a new revenue model, some newspapers are beginning to distinguish themselves and may finally provide signs of a path forward, according to a new study [1] by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism.

The report, based on PEJ's analysis of private financial data from 38 newspapers and in-depth interviews with senior executives from 13 companies that own a total of 330 dailies, found that the papers studied are losing seven dollars in print advertising for every one dollar they are gaining in new digital revenue-a ratio that shows the pace at which newspapers are shrinking.

But unlike the usual aggregate industry data, the report's 38 case studies also reveal enormous differences among newspapers, which suggest different management approaches can make a significant difference in performance.

Some papers that shared proprietary financial data with PEJ are coming close to matching their losses in print with gains in online advertising. While the papers studied on average grew digital revenue by 12%, one paper studied saw online ad revenue grow by 63%-and grew print advertising revenue by 8% as well. Another grew online advertising revenue by 50%, and came close to matching its print declines. But some papers are failing to grow digital revenue at all.  One paper studied saw digital revenue fall 37%; another fell 25%.

"The study suggests that the future of newspapers, rather than being determined entirely by sweeping external trends, can be substantially affected by company culture and management-even at papers of quite different sizes," said PEJ Director Tom Rosenstiel.

Among the study's key findings:

The Project for Excellence in Journalism tracks the transformation of journalism in a changing information landscape through its annual State of the News Media report, its ongoing News Coverage Index and a series of special reports. As part of the nonpartisan, non-advocacy Pew Research Center, it does not take positions on policy issues.

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