Wednesday, October 19, 2016

NPR Reports Ratings Growth


Across the board, NPR's multiplatform journalism has seen a tremendous audience growth. NPR's radio broadcasts, podcasts, and digital reporting have all reached new heights in 2016, according to a press release.

Jarl Mohn
"NPR's increased ratings and digital engagement can be attributed to first rate journalism, riveting storytelling, revamped newsmagazines, live reporting, and better user platforms," said Jarl Mohn, president and CEO of NPR. "And that means we are all doing a far better job of our public service mission, community engagement and local impact.

"While some of our audience growth is due to this unusual election cycle, the audience we retain is a tribute to the exceptional reporting of NPR and Member station journalists. I would also point out that NPR stations have outperformed many of their commercial news counterparts. Commercial news radio which operates in the same news cycle and is affected by the same events is up 15% percent in the morning, NPR is up 26%. In the afternoons, commercial news radio is up 19% in the top markets, NPR is up 43%.

"These increases confirm that there is a real appetite for factual reporting, and people are turning to NPR as their source for credible news."

Broadcast

The number of listeners for every NPR news, information and talk program increased considerably this year. NPR's flagship programs, Morning Edition and All Things Considered, broke broadcast audience records, particularly in the coveted 25-54 age demographic.

All Things Considered hits an all-time weekly audience high of 13.3 million, and Morning Edition is at its second highest at 13.5 million. In the 25-54 age demographics Morning Edition grew by 26%, All Things Considered grew by 43%, Weekend Edition (Saturday) grew by 16%, Weekend Edition (Sunday) grew by 30%, and All Things Considered (Weekend) grew by 33%.

The total weekly listeners for all NPR stations are about 36.6 million; weekly listeners for NPR Programming and Newscasts account for about 28.8 million of that total.

Podcasts

In an increasingly competitive field, NPR remains the leading publisher of podcasts, holding Podtrac's #1 spot for the 6th month in a row (since Podtrac began counting). In the month of September, NPR's combined podcasts had 63 million unique downloads, nearly double its closest publisher.

Every new podcast launched by NPR in the last two years has reached #1 on the iTunes top ten ranking at the time of their launch, and then stayed in the top ten for weeks.

The NPR Politics Podcast, which launched in 2015, most recently took over the #1 spot on the iTunes charts. The Politics Podcast which has averaged about 450,000 downloads a week over the last three months, reached a staggering 1,118,000 downloads during the first week of October.

Starting October 25, the NPR Politics Podcast will be releasing a new episode EVERY DAY until the election.

Digital and Mobile

NPR has made huge gains in mobile usage and online traffic. The NPR One app, which delivers curated stories and podcasts to users based on their individual preferences, has grown 124% year over year.

Use of the digital content available at NPR.org also climbed to record highs; reaching 40 million unique visitors in September for an average of over 36 million per month. NPR.org's success is partly due to innovations like NPR's live fact-checking tool of the Presidential debates. During the first Presidential debate, NPR's fact checking tool attracted over 9.7 million page views from 7.7 million unique viewers – making the first debate and the following day NPR's two largest web traffic days ever.

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