Search engines and gossip blogs are having a growing impact on online news-consumption patterns, according to the just-released Hitwise US News and Media Report, which examines recent trends in online news, writes MarketingVox (via MarketingCharts).
Moreover, online news consumption is beginning to fragment, as users rely on a greater number of news sources, expanding usage of nontraditional news sites, according to Hitwise research director LeeAnn Prescott, author of the report.
Consequently, the share of visits to the top 10 News and Media websites declined 3.8 percent from March 2006 to March 2007, while the number of ranking websites increased more than 12 percent - to 8,001 - according to the report.
Google Grows as a Source of Traffic
Search engines, especially Google, are responsible for more News and Media category website traffic than ever before, according to the report.
Print News websites received 29.7 percent more traffic from Google in March 2007 than in March 2006, and Broadcast Media sites received 35.9 percent more traffic from Google in the same time period.
Search engines accounted for 23.3 percent, 17.0 percent and 41.6 percent of traffic to the websites of the Print Media, Broadcast Media and IT Media subcategories, respectively, according to the report.
News Aggregators (such as Yahoo News, Google News, and Drudge Report) and portals were also significant sources of traffic for News and Media websites. Traffic from portal frontpages to Print, Broadcast and IT Media websites constituted 4.9 percent, 17.0 percent and 11.9 percent of traffic, respectively, to sites in those subcategories.
Impact of Video
The amount of traffic leaving News and Media category sites for Multimedia category sites increased 196 percent from April 2006 to March 2007.
News events that involved user-generated video, such as those related to the death of “Crocodile Hunter” Steve Irwin and the hanging of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, helped drive traffic between News and Media and Multimedia websites, according to Hitwise.
“News events in 2006 exposed internet users to emerging sources of online information,” said Prescott. “Search engines were more likely to be the first step for internet users in their search for information about breaking events, and search engine results from news video services, video sites like YouTube, and blogs were more likely to contain the information they sought, thus hastening the growth of non-traditional news sources.”
Other key findings from the report:
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