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Monday, June 11, 2007

TV Network News Top Source of News and Information Today

TV Network News Top Source of News and Information Today

Just Two in Five U.S. Adults are Regular Readers of Newspapers

ROCHESTER, N.Y., June 11 /PRNewswire/ -- Gathering news and information used to be easy - there was the network news and the daily newspaper. Then cable news stations entered the picture, forever changing the news landscape. And the impact of the Internet has changed it even further. With all of these 24-hour news sources at our fingertips, will there still be a place for newspapers in the new information age?

The answer is "yes", according to a recent Harris Poll. In a survey of adults in five European countries, Australia and the United States, readership of major daily newspapers today ranges from a low of six percent of adults in Great Britain and Italy to a high of 13 percent in Spain and Germany. The number one source for each country is TV network news.

But, looking five years in to the future, the number for major daily newspapers drops just slightly. The lowest percentage of adults who indicate that major daily newspapers will be their source for news and information is in Great Britain and Italy (4% each) while the highest percentage is among German adults (12%). The big difference is that online news and information sites become the number one source of news and information for the United States, France, Italy, and Spain and are tied for first for Australian adults. TV network news will still be first for adults in Great Britain and Germany.

These are some of the results of a Harris Poll which was conducted online by Harris Interactive(R) among a total of 8,749 adults within France (1,134); Germany (1,133); Great Britain (1,006); Italy (1,122); Spain (995); Australia (976); and the United States (2,383), between May 2 and 14, 2007. In Italy and the United States, these adults were 18 and older; in all other countries, they were 16 and older. Data from this survey was also presented at the World Association of Newspapers Annual Congress on June 6, 2007.

Are Adults Reading the Newspaper?

Across the countries, frequency of newspaper readership varies greatly. Almost half (48%) of Spanish adults and 46 percent of Germans are regular readers (5 or more days a week). Two out of five US adults (39%) are regular readers as are one-third of British adults (35%), Italian adults (34%) and Australian adults (33%). On the low end, just one-quarter (26%) of French adults regularly read the paper while 44 percent of them are infrequent readers, only one day a week or less.

There have been a lot of reasons given for not reading the newspaper. The number one reason for U.S. (58%), French (57%), German (56%) and Australian (66%) adults is simply lack of time. For British and Spanish adults, the top reason for not reading the newspaper is that it is biased or too narrow of a viewpoint in its reporting (54% for each country). For over half of Italian adults (52%) the top reason is that it is easier to go online for news and information. As this is also a reason for over half of U.S. and French adults (55% each) and half of Australian adults (49%), it is definitely something newspapers should be concerned with in moving towards the future.

Ultimately, it seems that a good deal of information gathering is occurring online. Half of adults in Germany and Australia as well as more than half of French (54%), US (56%) and Spanish adults (58%) access online news and information sites at least once a day. In Italy, this number jumps as three- quarters of adults (74%) access online news sites at least once a day. Great Britain seems slower to go online. One-third (31%) of British adults do not access online news sites with any regularity and an additional 28 percent of them only access them about once a week.

Credibility of Newspapers

Newspapers may have a small credibility issue. While adults in these seven countries do not believe that newspapers have absolutely no credibility, they do not believe they have complete credibility either. On a scale of 0 to 100 where "0" means they have absolutely no credibility and "100" means complete credibility, adults in great Britain rate newspapers a score of 50 - which is the lowest of all the countries -- closely followed by Italy (mean of 52) and the United States (mean of 57). Adults in France, Spain and Australia all are close in their attitudes towards newspapers' credibility as they give mean scores of 58, 59 and 60, respectively. Adults in Germany, however, have the strongest concept of newspapers' credibility as they give them a score of 67.

Roles of Newspapers

While people may not be reading newspapers as much as they once were, they still do see the importance of them. Four out of five or more adults in all seven countries say it is important for newspapers to have roles such as providing news and information about evens in their region, country and the world. Three-quarters or more in each of the countries surveyed believe an important role of newspapers is to provide news they can use in their daily life and that is interesting to know. One area where the United States varies from the other countries is in providing information that is needed to know how to vote. Eight in ten U.S. adults (79%) say this is an important role of newspapers and this is by far the highest of all the countries. Just six in ten Italian and British adults (60% and 61% respectively) feel the same way.

Looking to the future

Looking more specifically to the future, the top thing newspapers and their associated online news sites could do to better represent the issues in their communities would be to ensure all points of views are represented. Another important item for the future is providing more research and findings on key issues. Two in five (44%) U.S. adults, half of Spanish adults and 57 percent of Australian adults all say this is something newspapers could do to better represent issues in their communities. More than half of German adults (52%) and 48 percent of Australian adults believe raising the quality of writing and analysis would help newspapers in the future.

                                  TABLE 1                  CURRENT SOURCES OF NEWS AND INFORMATION          "What are your sources for news and information today?"   Base: All EU adults in five countries, US adults and Australian adults                          United   Great                         States  Britain France Italy Spain Germany Australia                           %        %       %     %     %      %        %   TV Network News         25       36      29    30    22    28        35   Online news and    information sites      18       14      17    22    18    16        18   Cable network news      14        2       9     5     7     7         3   Radio                   12       16      20    11    16    18        17   Major Daily    Newspapers             12        6       7     6    13    13        12   Local community    newspapers              8        6       3     7     3     4         6   Magazines                4        3       5     5     4     5         3   National Daily    Newspapers              3       11       6     8    12     5         5   School & work    newsletters             1        1       1     1     1     1         1   Other sources            3        2       3     3     2     3         1    Note: Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding  

Note: Respondents were presented with choices and their total of sources used needed to add up to 100%

TABLE 2

FUTURE SOURCES OF NEWS AND INFORMATION

"What do you think your sources for news and information will be five years

                                 from now?"   Base: All EU adults in five countries, US adults and Australian adults                           United   Great                         States  Britain France Italy Spain Germany Australia                            %       %       %     %     %       %        %   Online news and          26      26     26    39     28      23       30    information sites   TV Network News          22      33     24    22     17      26       30   Cable network news       15       4     11     8     10       6        5   Radio                    11      14     16     9     15      17       13   Major Daily              10       4      5     4     10      12       10   Newspapers   Local community           6       3      2     4      2       3        4    newspapers   Magazines                 3       2      4     4      3       4        2   National Daily            3      11      6     8     12       5        4    Newspapers   School & work             1       1      1     1      1       1        1    newsletters   Other sources             4       3      5     2      2       3        2    Note: Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding   

Note: Respondents were presented with choices and their total of sources used needed to add up to 100%

TABLE 3

NEWSPAPER CREDIBILITY "How would you assess the credibility of newspapers today (think of those that

   you familiar with) on an index of 0 to 100 where a '0' means they have  absolutely no credibility and a '100' means complete credibility at all                                  times?"   Base: All EU adults in five countries, Australia and US adults                   United     Great                 States    Britain France  Italy    Spain   Germany Australia                    %        %       %       %        %        %          %   0                4        5       2       2        1        1          2   1-10             4        5       4       5        5        2          3   11-20            5        6       3       4        3        2          4   21-30            5        6       6       8        4        2          4   31-40            3        6       5       8        5        4          4   41-50           17       18      18      22       18       16         18   51-60            6        9      14      15       11        8         14   61-70            8       11      14      14       11       11         11   71-80           21       11      20      12       20       29         23   81-90           10        5       5       3        7       12          8   91-100           4        2       2       2        4        5          3   Don't know      12       16       7       6       11        9          7   Mean            57       50      58      52       59       67         60    Note: Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding                                   TABLE 4                          IMPORTANCE OF NEWSPAPERS  

"Please indicate how important, in your life and/or community, you feel each

 of the following roles are for a newspaper and its associated online news         sites as well as any specialty publications it may have?"      Total Important (Very important and somewhat important combined)   Base: All EU adults in five countries, Australia and US adults                           United  Great                         States  Britain France Italy Spain Germany Australia                           %        %       %    %      %     %        %   Provide news and    information about    events in your local    region and community   88      79      85    93    83     84       90   Provide news and    information about    events in your    country                87      84      95    95    92     90       94   Provide news and    information about    events in the world    86      84      92    94    90     87       92   Hold public officials    accountable for    what they do           84      82      81    79    74     80       89   Report the news as    quickly as possible    84      82      83    82    92     79       88   Provide news and    information you    can use in    your daily life        83      80      77    81    87     82       85   Provide news and    information that's    interesting to know    81      79      87    89    91     80       86   Provide news and    information you need    to decide how to vote  79      61      69    60    63     72       75   Point out problems that    need to be solved      79      80      84    91    92     83       83   Protect the public    from abuses of power   78      82     83     85    90     83       86   Help society to solve    its problems           56      61     69     71    86     66       70                                   TABLE 5                     REASON FOR NOT READING NEWSPAPERS "What do you think causes some people not to want to read a newspaper on a                              regular basis?"   Base: All EU adults in five countries, Australia and US adults                           United   Great                         States  Britain France Italy Spain Germany Australia                           %        %       %    %      %      %         %   Lack of time to read    the newspaper          58       52     57    50     44     56       66   Easier to go online for    news and information   55       40     55    52     45     38       49   Biased or too narrow    of a viewpoint in its    reporting              50       54     43    49     54     30       53   Not viewed as a    credible or    trustworthy source    of news                38       52     22    39     35     29       45    and information   Poor quality of    reporting    and writing            32       32     11    20     17     22       33   Cost of the newspaper   30       30     53    31     28     55       32   Not writing or    reporting on topics    that are personally    relevant               27       29     31    13     23     21       32   Not providing enough    information about    local news, people    and events             21       21     12    18    15      16       27   Not visual enough,    not interesting or    compelling    from a design and    formal standpoint      17       15     27    22    19      29       21   Something else          10       10      9     9    23      16       12   Not sure                 7        5      3     2     4       3        2   Note: Multiple Responses Allowed                                   TABLE 6                          NEWSPAPERS IN THE FUTURE "What can newspapers and their associated online news sites and specialty publications do to better represent the issues in their communities in the                                  future?"   Base: All EU adults in five countries, Australia and US adults                           United  Great                         States  Britain France Italy Spain Germany Australia                           %        %       %     %      %     %        %   Ensure that all    points of view are    fairly represented    in key issues occurring    in the community       65       58     64    68     65     57       79   Provide more research    and  findings on    key issues occurring    in the community       44       39     37    39     50     34       57   Raise the quality of    writing and analysis    on the key issues    occurring in the    community              43       40     35    43     41     52       48   Better integration    of the newspaper and    its associated online    sites for more in-depth    coverage and links on    key issues in the    community              36       33     32    47     39     37       43   Allow for more    'citizen journalism'    that publishes    citizen stories    and opinion            30       31     37    40     40     31       39   Provide more interactive    reader and audience    forums for debate on    key community issues   26       24     29    33     42     25       40   Take stronger stands    on key issues    occurring in the    community and say    what the newspaper    feels is the    right outcome or    direction              20       30     19    33     41     38       30   Something else           4        3      6     6      8      5        4   Not sure                18       20     12     3      8     14        8   Note: Multiple Responses Allowed                                   TABLE 7                            NEWSPAPER READERSHIP          "Please indicate your frequency of newspaper readership"   Base: All EU adults in five countries, US adults and Australian adults                          United  Great                        States  Britain France Italy Spain Germany Australia                           %       %       %     %      %     %        %   Regular reader,    usually 5 or more     39      35      26    34     48     46      33    days per week   Occasional    reader, 2 or 3        25      24      30    35     30     22      31    days a week   Infrequent    reader, 1 day a    week or less          36      40      44    31     21     32      36    Note: Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding                                   TABLE 8                           ACCESSING ONLINE SITES  "Please indicate your frequency of accessing online news and information       sites.  Please choose the statement which best describes you."   Base: All EU adults in five countries, US adults and Australian adults                           United  Great                         States  Britain France Italy Spain Germany Australia                           %        %       %     %     %      %        %   I access online    news and information    multiple times    per day, they are    an extremely    important source    of information    for me.                19      9       20    33     16     15       16   I access online    news and    information sites    at least once a    day, they are    important but not    the only source I    rely on.               37     32       34    41     42     34       34   I access online    news and    information sites    about once a    week, they are    interesting but I    tend to rely more    on other sources.      24     28       28    17     28     24       25   I do not access    online news and    information sites    with any    regularity.  They    are not an    important source    of information    and news to me.       20      31       17     9     13     27       24  Note: Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding    Methodology  

This Harris Poll was conducted online by Harris Interactive within France, Germany, Great Britain and Spain (aged 16 and older) and adults in the United States, Australia, and Italy (aged 18 and over) between 2nd and 14th May 2007. By country, the totals are: France 1,134; Germany 1,133; Great Britain 1,006; Italy 1,122; Spain 995. Australia 976; and the United States 2,383. Figures for age, sex, education, region and Internet usage were weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the population. Propensity score weighting was used to adjust for respondents' propensity to be online.

All sample surveys and polls, whether or not they use probability sampling, are subject to multiple sources of error which are most often not possible to quantify or estimate, including sampling error, coverage error, error associated with nonresponse, error associated with question wording and response options, and post-survey weighting and adjustments. Therefore, Harris Interactive avoids the words "margin of error" as they are misleading. All that can be calculated are different possible sampling errors with different probabilities for pure, unweighted, random samples with 100% response rates. These are only theoretical because no published polls come close to this ideal.

Respondents for this survey were selected from among those who have agreed to participate in Harris Interactive surveys. The data have been weighted to reflect the composition of the adult population. Because the sample is based on those who agreed to participate in the Harris Interactive panel, no estimates of theoretical sampling error can be calculated.

These statements conform to the principles of disclosure of the National Council on Public Polls.

   J30886   Q1006, 1011, 1015, 1021, 1025, 1030, 1035, 1040, 1045, 1050, 1055, 1060    The Harris Poll(R) #52, June 11, 2007   By Regina Corso, director, The Harris Poll(R), Harris Interactive.    About Harris Interactive  

Harris Interactive is the 12th largest and fastest-growing market research firm in the world. The company provides innovative research, insights and strategic advice to help its clients make more confident decisions which lead to measurable and enduring improvements in performance. Harris Interactive is widely known for The Harris Poll, one of the longest running, independent opinion polls and for pioneering online market research methods. The company has built what it believes to be the world's largest panel of survey respondents, the Harris Poll Online. Harris Interactive serves clients worldwide through its United States, Europe and Asia offices, its wholly-owned subsidiaries Novatris in France and MediaTransfer AG in Germany, and through a global network of independent market research firms. More information about Harris Interactive may be obtained at www.harrisinteractive.com.To become a member of the Harris Poll Online and be invited to participate in online surveys, register at www.harrispollonline.com.

   Press Contact:   Tracey McNerney   Harris Interactive   585-214-7756   tmcnerney@harrisinteractive.com  

First Call Analyst:
FCMN Contact:

Source: Harris Interactive

CONTACT: Tracey McNerney of Harris Interactive, +1-585-214-7756,
tmcnerney@harrisinteractive.com

Web site: http://www.harrisinteractive.com/


Profile: International Entertainment

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