What is it about?

News organizations increasingly focus their efforts to boost traffic on their websites to grow their share of online advertising. We investigated the relationship between news websites’ traffic ranking and their social media tools of Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Google Plus. For a year we monitored the followers of all Greek regional newspapers in relation to the traffic on their websites. We continued monitoring for a second year to validate the robustness of the findings and we hereby present results for 86 weeks. Statistical analysis leads to the conclusion that the number of social media subscribers can predict the competitive position of a newspaper in the market based on its website traffic. The effect lasts for a limited period of time, one to three weeks, depending on the specific medium. Importantly, results indicate the potential of developing a prediction model of the website’s traffic, based on the social media metrics of the organization, as a useful tool to increase traffic and revenues from online advertising.

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Why is it important?

Results indicate the potential of developing a prediction model of the website’s traffic, based on the social media metrics of the organization, as a useful tool to increase traffic and revenues from online advertising.

Perspectives

The most important element of this study is the aim of creation, for the first time, of a predictive model of a news website traffic, based on its social media metrics. It is clear that in order to make such a model operational it should be enriched with important parameters / variables. The prediction model can be enriched with significant social media metrics such as the number of posts, shares, likes (on posts) and comments in social media accounts, as well as the impact these metrics may have on news website traffic, such as the number of visits and page views.

Ioannis Angelou
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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This page is a summary of: Social Media Followership as a Predictor of News Website Traffic, Journalism Practice, June 2019, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/17512786.2019.1635040.
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