Tablet users say they consume more news than they did previously and rely more on traditional news providers, according to a new survey. They also want more control and customization options than current apps offer.
The study sponsored by the BBC and Starcom MediaVest measured how tablet owners are changing their news consumption, and what opportunities it creates for publishers. (The methodology included a small number of in-depth interviews, an online survey of about 1,100 news-consuming adults, and a weeklong experiment where a dozen people where either deprived of or immersed in tablet content to gauge their responses.)
The results overall are encouraging for publishers hoping that iPads and other emerging tablets will play an important role in their digital futures. Among the most interesting findings:
- 63 percent of people said tablets lead them to rely more on traditional news providers and less on news aggregators.
- Tablets enhance the appetite for news. Fifty-nine percent said they access national or local news more often since they got a tablet. Seventy-eight percent said they follow a larger volume of news stories, and a greater variety of topics than before......
- 85 percent want options for “further customizing the depth of coverage I see for different types of stories.”
- 85 percent also want “more tablet-specific content that allows me to interact with news stories in a hands-on way.”
- 80 percent want the ability to “customize the format of news coverage for certain types of news stories.”
- 73 percent want news feeds or stories that are “automatically related to where I am and what I am doing.”
http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/media-lab/mobile-media/149482/tablet-owners-read-more-national-local-news-than-they-did-before/
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