Tag Archives: web advertising

Scales Are Tipped in Favor of Web Advertising

By Mark Hanzlik, AWN Executive Director

After years of speculation as to when newspaper advertising scales would be tipped in the direction of web advertising versus print advertising, it’s no longer a question of when.   From now on it will only be a question of how much.

We’re now beginning to look back on the first year that digital advertising in the U.S. became the number one advertising source for newspapers (local and national).   Online ad spending is expected to reach $25.8 billion by year end while print ads measure $22.8 billion.   According to eMarketer, “Online ads are typically seen as more reliable… their effectiveness can be measured, whereas print ads are difficult to measure.”  That’s always been a true statement since web advertising arrived on the scene in the 90’s, but it’s been difficult to measure out a winning formula for newspapers when print was so dominant.  Not so any longer.

unbalanced-scales

This blog entry seems timely on the heels of our last entry where we cited NAA’s reports of newspaper revenue declines, a story in which the NAA heralded economic recovery for newspapers based on this multi-platform growth.  While I’m still trying hard to subscribe to the glass-half-full thinking, it’s hard not to recognize this as another cold gust to the face in the bleak mid-Winter.

Many of us knew this day would eventually arrive and newspapers would not only be faced with a different revenue model outlook for the future but at the same time a notable change in journalism itself.  For advertisers, and retail in particular this portends a very different future for longer-term planning and strategies to reach new and existing customers under a rapidly changing sales and marketing environment.   This will be a beacon call for more revised print advertising budgets and plans that require digital integration, especially for more traditional print advertising war-horses who have yet to make the major commitment to digital.

For more from an earlier post on Bloomberg.com