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Top Magazines By Page Count In October

Posted on September 23, 2011 by Mediabids

Top 5 October Monthlies
Thursday, September 22, 2011

 from MinOnline


The monthlies' October 2011 ad-page performance showed more trick than treat in the September 19 min. Ad-page totals for the 154 tracked magazines had a weak 55-up/99-down ratio versus Oct. 2010.  The cumulative differential resulted in a solemn -8.03% and year-to-date (January - October) was -1.47%.

People en Español took the top slot in our October monthly boxscores with their 15th anniversary issue of 129.42 ad pages and a 73.14% hike from last year's 74.75 pages.

Playboy (+70.47%) made its premiere in our top 5 thanks to publisher (since Nov. 2009) John Lumpkin's 60-cent newsstand cover price of yesteryear promotion that was tied to the Sept. 19 premiere of The Playboy Club. Naturally, the advertisers followed.

And at Smithsonian (+42.40%), group publisher Jennifer Hicks tells min:

"Increases were purely driven by companies realizing the power and breadth of our brand. New business this year and to the October issue came from such automotive companies as Chevy Volt, Nissan Leaf, Toyota Venza; oil-industry corporate messages were from Shell and Chevron; and financial, from Credit Suisse. Other new business came from The Susan G. Komen Foundation (a Museum Day advertiser) and pharmaceutical companies Novartis, GSK, Eli Lilly and Pfizer. There were 11 new advertisers in the issue."

Here are the top 5 for October, sorted by highest percentage gains.
See the full October boxscore chart and analysis.

Ad Pages Way Down in 2009

Posted on January 13, 2010 by Mediabids

From MiN

Ad Pages Get Crushed, Down 25.6% in 2009
Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Bottom line? It really was as bad as it felt, but things may be bottoming. According to Publisher Information Bureau year-end counts, ad pages for the magazine industry were off 25.6% compared to 2008. That reflected a revenue drop of 18.1% as measured by rate cards. There were some signs of relief in the last quarter of the year when the ad page drop eased to a still-painful 21.6%.

It wasn’t all gloomy. As we have been reporting all year, not only were there titles that weathered the storm well, especially in the service content sector, but the food and food products ad segment actually spent 21.9% more in Q4 than in the same period in 2008 and on 9.8% more pages. Food was the only one of a dozen categories to show positive growth throughout the year. Nevertheless, in the fourth quarter of the year, some other segments showed a slowdown in the rate of decline. Household cleaners, pet foods and supplies, drugs, toiletries and fitness products all registered shallower drops from previous quarters this year, PIB reports. Of course, the comps are favorable for Q4 because by the end of 2008 many marketers had already started cutting budgets radically.

Among the magazines that did increase their ad pages substantially in 2009, People Style Watch was up 24.4%, OK Weekly +20.7%, Saveur +12.6%, Family Circle +11.5% and Scholastic Parent and Child +9.6%.

Top 5 Monthly Magazines By Ad Pages, over the past 5 years

Posted on January 10, 2010 by Mediabids

 

Another one from Min Online - Full Story here

Pretty interesting - this is the top 10 Monthly Magazines over the past 5 years, as measured by ad pages.

Top 10 Monthly Magazine Five Year Report (2005-2009)

Title

ytd 2009

 

% diff

 

ytd 2008

 

Diff.

 

ytd 2007

 

Diff.

 

ytd 2006

 

Diff.

 

ytd 2005

Style Watch 

624.30 

23.50 

505.49 

36.87 

369.31 

 ---

 ---

---

 ---

Saveur 

379.71 

12.27 

338.21 

-3.15 

349.21 

-1.27 

353.71 

-9.07 

389.00 

Family Circle 

1,739.53 

11.51 

1,559.93 

-13.73 

1,808.14 

10.56 

1,635.37 

8.88 

1,501.98 

Fitness 

736.35 

9.14 

674.70 

-22.62 

871.90 

11.32 

783.21 

-3.64 

812.81 

Flex 

2,604.91 

3.35 

2,520.53 

11.07 

2,269.35 

-3.28 

2,346.21 

16.14 

2,020.16 

Ladies' Home Journal 

1,269.57 

3.07 

1,231.80 

-20.34 

1,546.28 

0.13 

1,544.34 

-0.35 

1,549.69 

Muscle & Fitness 

1,995.81 

2.83 

1,940.96 

4.63 

1,855.08 

-2.08 

1,894.51 

14.58 

1,653.39 

Better Homes & Gardens

1,723.35 

2.04 

1,688.94 

-17.62 

2,050.09 

4.74 

1,957.33 

-8.24 

2,133.19 

Antiques, The Magazine 

848.50 

1.25 

838.00 

-9.41 

925.00 

-4.59 

969.50 

2.48 

946.00 

More 

917.94 

1.24 

906.74 

-30.32 

1,301.28 

19.01 

1,093.45 

12.82 

969.19 

Magazine Ad Pages Fell 19.2% in November 09

Posted on October 22, 2009 by Mediabids

 

Magazine ad pages continued their slide in November. MediaBuyerPlanner reports that MIN's latest survey of ad pages sold in consumer magazines show that November ad pages were down 19.2% from November of 08. There are a few bright spots.

Of 171 titles MIN reported on, 84% saw ad pages decline for the month; 46% saw pages fall more than 20%, and 24.5% saw declines of 30% or more. Conde Nast’s W was one of the biggest losers, down 51% in ad pages, while Elle Decor was down 49%.

A few titles improved in November. People Stylewatch, for example, was up 32% in ad pages, and National Geographic was up 21.2%. Southern Living, More, Real Simple and Guns & Ammo also gained significantly in ad pages for the month.

MIN’s figures echo the third-quarter results recently released by the Publishers Information Bureau. Total ad pages for consumer magazines were down 26.6% for Q3 compared to the third quarter last year, per PIB. For the first half, ad pages were down 27.9%.

ZenithOptimedia’s latest ad forecast predicts that global ad spending will bottom out this year and will return to positive growth - though at just 0.5% - in 2010. Magazine advertising, however, will continue to decline for at least the next two years, ZenithOptimedia says.

http://www.marketingcharts.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/min-top-5-monthly-mags-ad-pages-gained-november-2009.jpg

AdAge: Google's New Search Test Targets Local Advertisers

Posted on October 11, 2009 by Mediabids

This article in AdAge on how Google is testing a set fee payment model on search advertising should shake up publishers. For the past three years, Mediabids has been offering per-response advertising in addition to our conventional ad sales. Right now thousands of publications use our per-response ads to augment their revenue streams. If anypublishers still think that pay-per-response is not a payment model that they will have to contend with in the future, think again. Google's test shows that even the most local advertisers will have this as an option in the near future in other mediums. If print is going to compete it has to adopt the payment model that advertisers feel comfortable with, learn more about our per-response program at www.mediabids.com.

Google Lures Local Advertisers by Subverting Its Own Search Policies

Two-City Test Takes on Yellow Pages With New Pricing System, Ad Model

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Google is experimenting with its deepest foray into local advertising and along the way is branching out from one of its most cherished philosophies of search advertising: the keyword auction.

In a bid to get more local advertisers to buy search ads, starting this week Google is trying out a new type of search ad and pricing system in the San Francisco and San Diego markets.

Rather than ask businesses to set up a campaign and bid for keywords, they're offering local advertisers (or non-advertisers) a search ad for a flat fee. The fee is set by Google and based on the average that similar businesses are paying for a given keyword in that market.



The goal is to simplify search advertising for local businesses that may not want to bid on keywords or to set up and optimize a search campaign.

"When we talk to small businesses, they don't always want to know what an auction is, how to create an ad, or bid on keywords, it's complicated, so our goal has been to, 'How can we make this really simple for them where they just pay a flat fee per month,'" Susan Wojcicki, Google VP of product management, said.

Familiar model
It's a model much more familiar to local businesses, such as plumbers, electricians, hair salons and restaurants, or any local business that has advertised in the yellow pages. But Google is offering an additional perk: the option to link the ad to a Google voice number so they know which calls are being referred from the search ad.

Calls that come in via the Google Voice number are identified by what Google is calling by a soft "whisper": "This call brought to you by Google."

The voice number allows businesses that don't have websites -- and don't care about clicks or conversions -- the ability to track the performance of their ad.

"You get the benefits of simplicity and a simple startup but also the measureability of AdWords so we tell you how many visitors you got and what value you are getting for the investment you made," said Jeff Huber, Google senior VP of engineering.

The program has been live for two days in San Francisco and San Diego, and right now there are no immediate plans to expand it. Google isn't first to market with this; companies such as WebVisible and Marchex have been packaging search inventory and reselling it to local businesses for some time.

Improving relevance
But those companies aren't Google, which for many people has become the de facto yellow pages as it improves local search relevance. Google believes it could vastly expand the number of local businesses using AdWords by allowing them to easily convert an organic listing into a paid ad for a flat fee.

Max Kalehoff, VP of marketing for Clickable, said Google's move may address the tendency of local advertises to "churn," or start a campaign and give up on it for whatever reason. "Some businesses don't want to do search advertising; they just want to put a dollar in and receive phone calls," he said.

The new local ads come as Google is nearing the end of a top-to-bottom revamp of its search advertising system over the last six months known internally as AdWords 3.0. That system was first launched in 1999 and turned Google from a small startup against the likes of Inktomi and Altavista into a company that generates $25 billion in revenue, mostly from search advertising.

As part of the revamp, Google is trying to give more relevant results for local searches, which plays into its local strategy. A user who searches for a restaurant, for example, no longer has to specify where they are; that is determined by the IP address or browser, and relevant local results are returned, along with a map.

The experiment in flat-fee ads is part of Google's Local Business Center interface, which Mr. Huber said serves "over a million" small businesses worldwide.

Consumer Magazine Ad Pages Continue to Slide

Posted on September 27, 2009 by Mediabids

This from Media Industry Newsletter and Marketing Charts:

Consumer magazines saw ad pages dip another 20.1% in October, for a total decline of 22% through the first 10 months of the 2009, according to the Media Industry Newsletter (MIN). For October, Architectural Digest took the biggest hit, while Interview saw the largest increase in ad pages.

Ad pages were down in every category and at nearly every major title, writes MediaBuyerPlanner:

  • 131 of the 155 monthlies tracked by MIN saw ad pages slip in October.
  • 111 of them saw ad pages fall more than 10%.
  • 76 saw ad pages fall more than 20%.
  • 42 saw ad pages slide more than 30%.
  • 22 saw ad pages plunge more than 40%.

The titles that took biggest hits:

  • Architectural Digest (down 49.4%)
  • Veranda (-47.4%)
  • W (-45.5%)
  • Town & Country (-45.2%)
  • Conde Nast Traveler (-45.1%)
  • Dwell (-45%), Wired (-43.2%)
  • Gourmet (-42.7%)
  • Ebony (-40.1%)
  • National Geographic Traveler (-45.2%)

The magazines seeing the most improvement:

  • Interview (up 49.3%)
  • People StyleWatch (+23.7%)
  • Texas Monthly (+21.9%)
  • All You (+20.5%)
  • Southern Living (+12.4%)
  • Family Circle (+13.9%)
  • Fitness (+11.7%)
  • Flex (+8.8%)
  • Saveur (+8.3%)
  • Muscle & Fitness (+6.9%)

October pulled the year-to-date average up slightly, from 23.6% year-to-date through September to 22% year-to-date through October.