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
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