A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Jul 4, 2016

Online News Sites Get 80 Percent Of Their Viewers From Google and Facebook

There is growing concern about how concentrated our sources of information have become. The looming question is whether anti-trust action is imminent and, possibly more to the point, whether it would make any difference in an era the economics of convenience dominate. JL

Matt Rosoff reports in Business Insider:

If you broaden the categories beyond specific brands, 86% of traffic comes from social (including sources like Twitter) and search (Google, Bing, Yahoo, and others).
Facebook caused quite a stir among journalists and news companies when it acknowledged that it was changing the mix of material Facebook users would see in their News Feeds. The company said it was going more back toward its roots, favoring updates from friends and families, and showing less news.
This chart from Statista shows why this is such a big deal. Facebook is now the number-one source of referrals to news sites, according to January-February 2016 data from Parse.ly, a digital media analytics provider. Google is right behind it, and the two of them together provide almost 80% of all traffic to news sites. If you broaden the categories beyond specific brands, 86% of traffic comes from social (including sources like Twitter) and search (Google, Bing, Yahoo, and others).
20160630_ReferralsStatista

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