London Times loses "less than" 90 percent of readers online

LONDON (Reuters) – News Corp’s Times of London has lost less than 90 percent of its online audience since it started charging readers on the Web, fewer than it had feared, it said on Tuesday.

The Times is the first major consumer newspaper to put its online content behind a so-called paywall and the three-month-old exercise is being closely watched by an industry whose circulation and advertising revenues are in decline.

Asked on BBC radio whether the audience drop was greater or less than the 90 percent it had considered likely, Times editor James Harding replied: “It’s less than that.”

News International, the British newspaper arm of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, said the new Times and Sunday Times sites and Apple iPad app had attracted more than 105,000 paying customers so far.

A further 100,000 readers who subscribe to the print editions and get the digital versions for free have activated their digital accounts.

That compares with 189,000 paying subscribers that Pearson’s Financial Times reported for the third quarter, a 50 percent rise since the beginning of 2010 that was partly driven by the launch of the iPad tablet computer.

“The industry is still very much in an exploratory phase on paywalls and the jury is still out on their success. We expect to see many more adaptations of the model,” said Matt Dodd of leading media market-research firm Nielsen.

Like News Corp’s Wall Street Journal, the FT has always charged for its online content, seen as indispensable to the business community.

Subscribers are more valuable to advertisers than readers who access online content for free, because they tend to be more engaged and the publisher knows more about them, meaning a steep decline in audience need not be financially detrimental.

Continues at:  Times loses less than 90 percent of readers online – Yahoo! News.

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