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E-Media Tidbits

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Steve Outing
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Posted by Steve Outing 1:23 PM January 31, 2006
Next Category to Lose for Newspapers: Autos
Having bought my last car (and sold my previous one) without once looking at a newspaper, I can understand how the auto category is slipping badly for newspapers. As the Wall Street Journal reported last week in an article by Joseph Hallinan, "Auto ads, a major source of newspaper-classified advertising, have been slipping steadily for nearly two years. But the slippage may be turning into a landslide."

A couple key indicators, as reported by Hallinan: Tribune Co. just announced that its newspaper auto-classifieds revenue dropped 16 percent in December; Lee Enterprises reported a 15.2-percent drop in auto advertising for the fourth quarter of 2005; McClatchy Co. told of a 20-percent decline for December.

This week, another bad-news indicator: The Polk Center for Automotive Studies released a study showing that the Internet is now the dominant medium among new car buyers. It described traditional mass media as "nearly obsolete" among first-time car buyers. (Here's a report from MediaDailyNews on the Polk study.)

Here's a telling excerpt from the WSJ story:
"Dealers are finding Web ads generate strong responses. 'Eight out of 10 customers that walk into our dealership have already looked at our website,' says Wes Lutz, who owns Extreme Dodge/Hyundai in Jackson, Michigan. Demand from the Internet is so keen that three years ago he designated a new position at his dealership: Internet manager. That person's job is to reply to all Internet inquiries within an hour.

"Mr. Lutz still advertises with the local paper, but not nearly as much as he did 10 years ago. 'They're just really antiquated,' he says. 'They're just stuck in time.'"
That's a wake-up call. Jackson is not in a major metro area; it's in the middle of Michigan, west of Detroit. These trends are far-reaching.

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this item put Jackson east of Detroit. It is, of course, to the west.
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Papers not dead yet. Having used both the newspaper and the internet, I find... More.
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