“ In March of this year, National Public Radio (NPR) revealed that by the end of 2008, 23.6 million people were tuning into its broadcasts each week. In fact, NPR’s ratings have increased steadily since 2000, and they’ve managed to hold on to much of their 2008 election coverage listenership bump (with over 26 million people tuning in each week so far in 2009), unlike many of their mainstream media counterparts. Compared to cable news, where most networks are shedding viewers, and newspapers, where circulation continues to plummet, NPR is starting to look like they have the future of news all figured out. Or at least, they appear to doing a lot better at it than the rest of the traditional media. But what is NPR doing differently that’s causing their listener numbers to swell? They basically have a three-pronged strategy that is helping them not only grow now, but also prepare for the future media landscape where traditional methods of consumption (TV, radio, print) could be greatly marginalized in favor of digital distribution. „

Why NPR is the Future of Mainstream Media

I shared this on reader but also thought it was worth sharing here. I was thinking today that I ought to give npr a donation since, I think, that in the last month, on my own time, at least, I’ve listened to NPR more than I’ve read magazines or newspapers or watched TV (or even TV on the internet). My listening of NPR has picked up dramatically in 2009, and this article gives a few insights into why this is happening.

Quote posted at 10:52 PM (6 months ago) | Permalink