Fun with metrics

Metrics, met­rics, met­rics. Don’t you just love them? E&P quotes the latest Nielsen fig­ures out show­ing how long people spend at news sites.

Brand or Chan­nel — Mar. ’08 Time per Per­son (hh:mm:ss) — Mar. ’07 Time per Per­son March 07 (hh:mm:ss)

NYTimes.com — 0:37:14 — 0:33:48
USATODAY.com — 0:11:26 — 0:17:50
washingtonpost.com — 0:16:15 — 0:18:01
Wall Street Journal Online — 0:14:49 — 0:11:18
LA Times — 0:07:38 — 0:10:35

So there you have it. Com­pel­ling evid­ence that NYTimes.com read­ers leave browser win­dows open for longer than their LA counterparts.

The Trust Obsession

CNN bills itself as the most trus­ted name in news. Director-General Mark Thompson reck­ons pub­lic trust is the life-blood of the BBC. Politi­cians and TV presenters wail and tear their clothes in pub­lic at the public’s loss of trust in the media. “Woe is us,” wails the col­lect­ive cry from the journ­al­ism pro­fes­sion, “they don’t believe.”

Media organ­isa­tions want to wal­low in trust like hip­pos in mud. They want to roll in it until they’re covered from head to toe. When it dries up, thanks to dodgy edit­ing on a royal doc­u­ment­ary promo or phoney com­pet­i­tions, the mud cracks and it’s a “crisis”. Con­tinue read­ing