"Luck is not chance - It's Toil - Fortune's  expensive smile Is earned"   Emily Dickinson  (American Poet who has been  called the New England mystic, 1830-1886)                       Circulation figures don't tell whole story   by Earl Maucker  Editor  http://www.sun- sentinel.com/news/opinion/columnists/sfl- emcol06may06,0,1139889,print.column
    Back in the 1960s when I was a paperboy for the Alton  Telegraph, I used to groan each time I received a new  subscription order. One more paper to deliver, I  thought, more weight in the bag, more time on the  route -- less time for play. 
    Ah, for the good old days of circulation growth.
    Fast forward to 2007 and once again we're reminded  in stories this week that circulation of newspapers  across the U.S. is in decline. 
    Pretty dismal stuff, it would seem.
    But wait. Let's take a deeper look at the facts before  we start writing off the future of newspapers.
    Yes, circulation figures are dropping in most regions  of the United States. That's hardly surprising in today's  environment, with so much media fragmentation, so  many ways to get news and information.
    In reality, some of the circulation declines are  deliberate, as publishers seek value from papers they  do distribute.
    More and more newspaper companies are limiting or  eliminating entirely the newspapers they give away for  free or at a major discount because, generally, those  newspapers are not well read.
    But beyond the number of newspapers in the market,  experts and analysts in the business say newspaper  advertisers care more about readership, which  measures whether people are actually reading the  paper instead of tossing it into the recycle bin without  so much as a glance.
    Our focus here at the Sun-Sentinel has been on home  delivery or single copy sales, areas where we believe  there is substantial value.
    The agency that monitors circulation of newspapers is  the Audit Bureau of Circulation, which, in my opinion,  is still back in the 1960s in the way they count and  report numbers.
    Sure, they break it down even to the zip code level.  They calculate circulation in the primary region and  secondary regions of the newspaper's market,  individually paid subscriptions, bulk sales, third-party  sales and a host of other metrics including total  readers of the daily newspaper.
    But what they don't report is the total audience a  media company like the Sun-Sentinel reaches  through its various publications and electronic  channels.
    Even with fewer copies on the street, our readership is  up from what it was two years ago.
    The published audits do not take into account the  impact of the Internet or subsidiary  publications.
    We, like most major newspaper companies, are  major players in this relatively new, still-evolving  medium.
    For us, it's Sun-Sentinel.com
    Which, by the way, has grown in audience traffic every  year it's been in operation.
    "We're seeing good audience growth online. So far  this year, our Sun-Sentinel.com page views -- one way  we measure our audience -- are up more than 12  percent over the same time in 2006," said Kathy  Skipper, vice president & general manager for Sun- Sentinel Interactive. "We believe several things are  contributing to this growth -- regular news updates,  more video and more databases that are focused on  helping consumers.
    Combined with millions of page views per month on  our Internet site and the distribution of our main  newspaper, plus niche products like the Jewish  Journal, City & Shore magazine, City Link, Teen Link  and other products, our total audience reach has  grown tremendously over the past few years.
    "We recognize that in order to reach our audience  effectively we must serve our customers on multiple  platforms," said our General Manager Howard  Greenberg. "Through Forum Publishing we have the  largest family of weekly community publications in  South Florida as well as the largest Spanish  language audience in the Broward-Palm Beach  market through el Sentinel, our Spanish language  weekly."
    No one is denying that newspapers are dealing with  enormous challenges in today's world of fragmented  media and the influence of the Internet.
    But newspapers and the journalists that work on them  have a healthy future ahead, as we transform our  business to the new world of multiple media.
    The good news is that the appetite for news has never  been more robust.
    We intend to serve our customers the way they like  it.
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