Author Topic: Herald-Sun breaks record sales thanks to Richmond winning the premiership  (Read 1867 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Proof Richmond is the club that sells papers :yep  :thumbsup.

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Herald Sun’s Grand Final week campaign a winner in print and digital

By Mediaweek
Posted on October 9, 2017


“This was the single best Grand Final campaign the Herald Sun has ever mounted”


News Corp’s Herald Sun has reported its fully integrated Grand Final series campaign spanning two weeks – from the Brownlow on September 25 to post Grand Final on October 7 – with multiplatform content, unprecedented live site activity, and multiple reader giveaways attracted unprecedented audiences.

Initial consumer sales results – for the week leading into Grand Final culminating on Sunday October 1 – saw an extra 155,000 newspapers purchased.

Online, the audience from Grand Final eve Friday to the Sunday post-match was up 48% on last year (in itself a big weekend given Bulldogs’ historic win) and page views were up 18%, with a total of 2,854,902 page views.

Peter Blunden, managing director – editorial, and a huge Tigers fan, said the Richmond win after 37 years had put the roar back into newspapers.

“This was the single best Grand Final campaign the Herald Sun has ever mounted – it was planned meticulously and the results speak for themselves.”

The hero newspaper of the week was the Sunday Herald Sun, which sold an extra 68,000 papers. It was the largest percentage volume lift of any Grand Final edition of the Herald Sun on record, easily eclipsing the lift from the Bulldogs win the previous year when an extra 55,000 papers were sold following a 62-year drought.

The “Roarsome” newspaper had 40 pages of Grand Final coverage including a 32-page souvenir wrap, all pulled together within three hours of the final siren.

The paper was planned extensively, with the front page promoted as soon as the final page was sent to print, and about 25% of stock sent straight to the heart of Richmond on the first available distribution trucks.

Sunday Herald Sun editor Nick Papps said the Tigers win was the fairytale result.

“We had the paper delivered to the Tigers celebrations and in the players’ hands by 11pm.

“At the same time we were replating for our second edition including new pics on the front, 2 and 3 of the main book with Jack Reiwoldt lighting up the after party concert with The Killers.

“This team captivated the state for so much of the year and, in the final weeks of the season, sparked a fervour we have never seen before.”

Digital editor Nathaniel Bane said that, notably, the brand’s heavy focus on SEO and social saw traffic from search up 154% and page views from social up 37%.

The Grand Final weekend was kicked off with a big footy exclusive – Jake Stringer‘s cheating claims – generating 300,000 page views and a huge number of digital subscriptions.

That led into a bumper Grand Final Saturday with 683,667 readers swamping the site.

On social, the Herald Sun’s weekly Facebook reach was up 34% to just over 2 million.


« Last Edit: October 09, 2017, 02:54:03 PM by one-eyed »

Offline one-eyed

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Tigers press advantage

The Richmond Tigers were easy winners over the Western Bulldogs in the AFL grand final. Not a misprint. Diary is talking about the circulation boosting abilities of each club. This year, the Tigers proved pure circulation Vi-agra for the Herald Sun. The paper and its Sunday counterpart sold an extra 155,000 copies over the course of the week. “You dream of these results as an editor,” said Sunday Herald Sun editor Nick Papps. “I have never seen a greater atmosphere in Melbourne as I saw over the weekend and the week leading up.” Last year, in the wake of the Western Bulldogs victory over the Sydney Swans, ending the Melbourne club’s 55 year drought, the Sunday Herald Sun grand final edition sold 55,000 extra copies. This year, with the Tigers victorious, the Sunday paper sold an extra 68,000 copies. What’s more, the paper had a record 55,000 entries to its grand final tickets giveaway and its free Tiger masks put on 20,000 extra sales, while subscriptions doubled. “The Bulldog wait was greater. But the Tiger fanbase was greater,” Papps concluded.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/media/media-diary/magazine-now-rebel-with-a-cause/news-story/63a35c92acfc165eea757e11b1008e79

Online Chuck17

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Just noted that the HUN has Rance as maybe the greatest defender of all time, shame Claw isn't here to comment.

Offline YellowandBlackBlood

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Just noted that the HUN has Rance as maybe the greatest defender of all time, shame Claw isn't here to comment.
Probably butter soft like Grimes  :shh
OER. Calling it as it is since 2004.