min reporting: When the early metrics surrounding user engagement with digital
magazines first came in nearly two years ago, they struck many of us as
hard to believe. But there they were. After all, we had witnessed a
decade and a half of digitized media fragmenting not focusing user
attention. In many cases the early research was showing that readers of
enhanced magazines in apps were spending almost as much time per issue
as print readers spent with their analog copies. This was especially
surprising given the notoriously short attention spans readers
demonstrated with media brands online. In many cases print media had
gotten used to having a loyal reader for a good hour or more a month
with a given issue, while many branded media sites "bragged" of
cumulative hang times of only 12 to 15 minutes a month from a user. Was
it the natural clickiness of the Web, the LCD screen, the desktop
setting? Who knew? But media companies were frustrated with digital
fragmentation and once-loyal readers diffusing their media consumption
across many sites.
And yet here on the tablet – still an LCD, still interactive, still
connected to the Internet – we saw evidence of the return of user focus.
The early stats I saw from publishers like Conde Nast showed per-issue
engagement very close to print. Could it get any better than this?
Digital interactivity, lower-cost distribution and long attention spans
too?
It might get even better suggests Adobe, whose Digital Publishing Suite
(DPS) drives many of these magazine apps from Conde Nast, Newsweek, and
others. According to Lynly Schambers-Lenox, group product marketing
manager, digital publishing, Adobe, the latest metrics across hundreds
of magazine apps shows that tablet media may be edging out analog.
“People are reading this content on tablets potentially more than they
are in print,” she tells minonline. Across publishers, titles and
content types Adobe has seen time spent in apps rise 70% in just the
last 6 months. “56% of readers spend between 25 and 150 minutes per
month consuming content in an application,” she says.
Actually if you drill into those broad stats a bit more you find a range
of engagements on a per session basis. The largest share of app
sessions (35%) are only 1-5 minutes, so people still are doing
drive-bys. 27% are in the app for 5 to 10 minutes,
Another 29% are lingering 10-30 minutes. But cumulatively over the
course of the month we are seeing an impressive encounter with each
monthly issue of digital magazines.
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