2009 NADbank results show readership is stable (and even growing)
ShareThisThe 2009 results of NADbank's annual newspaper readership study have been released and according to the report, papers have "demonstrated their value to Canadians."
The overview of results shows that 77 per cent (14.7 million) of adults living in markets where a daily newspaper is available read either a printed or online edition each week. Some other results of note include:
The Globe article noted:
"However, cheap circulation – printing more copies and giving them away for free or at a heavy discount – is still being used by some papers to boost readership figures, including at the Toronto Star, which gave away tens of thousands of newspapers during the Winter Olympics. New circulation data show that in 2009, the Star produced more than 100,000 cheap or free copies every day of the week except Sunday...The Globe and the National Post distribute less than half as many free or discounted copies."
The study showed that "most adults migrate between print and online," with 73 per cent reading at least one printed newspaper each week and 22 per cent reading an online edition on the average week and 4 per cent reading only online.
A Toronto Star report on the study noted:
"The Star increased its total print and online readership within the GTA by 8.7 per cent, with a total weekly readership of 2.33 million adults...Weekday readership for The Globe and Mail rose 6.2 per cent to 406,500 in the GTA, the NADbank survey found. In comparison, the Toronto Sun's weekday readership plunged 21.5 per cent to 372,300 while the National Post fell 13.5 per cent to 167,800."
Readership of Canwest newspapers (including the Vancouver Sun, Calgary Herald, The Gazette and the Regina Leader-Post, among others) went up by 2.1 per cent, to four million, while weekly online readership was up 20 per cent, the Canwest News Service reports.
Not surprisingly, local news turned up as the most popular content read in daily newspapers, with 73 per cent of readers usually gravitating toward these pages.
Overall, NADbank called this year's readership "stable." The report explains:
"In the 22 markets measured in 2008 and 2009, weekly print readership remained stable at 73%; online readership increased from 20% to 22% resulting in an overall increase in newspaper readership (78% in 2009 compared to 77% in 2008)."
Check out the NADbank website for full results, various charts and presentations and further information.
The overview of results shows that 77 per cent (14.7 million) of adults living in markets where a daily newspaper is available read either a printed or online edition each week. Some other results of note include:
- 47 per cent of adults 18+ read a daily newspaper on the average weekday
- 73 per cent of adults 18+ read a printed daily newspaper in the past week
- 22 per cent of adults 18+ read a daily newspaper online in the past week
The Globe article noted:
"However, cheap circulation – printing more copies and giving them away for free or at a heavy discount – is still being used by some papers to boost readership figures, including at the Toronto Star, which gave away tens of thousands of newspapers during the Winter Olympics. New circulation data show that in 2009, the Star produced more than 100,000 cheap or free copies every day of the week except Sunday...The Globe and the National Post distribute less than half as many free or discounted copies."
The study showed that "most adults migrate between print and online," with 73 per cent reading at least one printed newspaper each week and 22 per cent reading an online edition on the average week and 4 per cent reading only online.
A Toronto Star report on the study noted:
"The Star increased its total print and online readership within the GTA by 8.7 per cent, with a total weekly readership of 2.33 million adults...Weekday readership for The Globe and Mail rose 6.2 per cent to 406,500 in the GTA, the NADbank survey found. In comparison, the Toronto Sun's weekday readership plunged 21.5 per cent to 372,300 while the National Post fell 13.5 per cent to 167,800."
Readership of Canwest newspapers (including the Vancouver Sun, Calgary Herald, The Gazette and the Regina Leader-Post, among others) went up by 2.1 per cent, to four million, while weekly online readership was up 20 per cent, the Canwest News Service reports.
Not surprisingly, local news turned up as the most popular content read in daily newspapers, with 73 per cent of readers usually gravitating toward these pages.
Overall, NADbank called this year's readership "stable." The report explains:
"In the 22 markets measured in 2008 and 2009, weekly print readership remained stable at 73%; online readership increased from 20% to 22% resulting in an overall increase in newspaper readership (78% in 2009 compared to 77% in 2008)."
Check out the NADbank website for full results, various charts and presentations and further information.
Comment Policy
J-Source invites comments on any content items or on any other topics relevant to journalism. Those posting comments are expected to adhere to standards of accuracy and fairness that would be recognized by those who practise, teach or study journalism.
- Comments are restricted to registered users. You must register with your full first and last name in order to be eligible to comment.
- Please communicate as effectively and intelligently as you would in a professional or academic forum, focusing on the issues at hand rather than the characters or characteristics of those involved.
- This forum is intended for discussion of the craft of journalism, not of the issues of the day that journalists cover; please do not post story tips or press releases.
- We moderate the forum for adherence to these standards of discourse, and reserve the right to decline any comment or restrict any user from commenting without giving reasons. Every effort is made to approve valid comments within 24 hours of submission.



Official list of Globe and Mail staff who took the buyouts
Why is this nice easy list of names with subheds not published as plain HTML (H2, OL, LI) with...
Do ethnocultural newspapers have a future in Canada?
Ethnic newspapers continue to provide a valuable role in transmitting information on Canadian...
OPINION: Video, shmideo: reporting is about telling what you see and hear
"It was as disreputable a piece of character assassination as I've ever seen in a...