Thursday, April 22, 2010

News Release Images Impact

From the approach at your front door to the first thing a reporter sees when opening a news release, images count!

Continuing the post, Spruced Up Releases Spring Media To Action, PRWeb has research to back up the fact that images have impact. They took a closer look at how multimedia impacts news consumption by studying the habits of their news consumers. The research combined quantitative analysis of usage patterns drawn from Web statistics with a survey and sent out to a segment of their email opt-in subscribers.

Here are top-line takeaways from that research:

1. People spend more time on releases that contain multimedia – Images really do have an impact on how much time people spend consuming news releases.
  • Releases with no images had an average time-on-page of 2:18; and 
  • Releases that contained images had an average time-on-page of 2:47.
Since journalists receive hundreds of releases each day, every second of every eyeball spent on a page can be a huge advantage to getting a story noticed and picked up in the news.

2. Bloggers and journalists actually use multimedia – Not only does multimedia positively enhance the experience of news releases, evidenced by indicators such as increased time-on-page, but news producers (journalists and bloggers) actually use multimedia they find on news releases to help construct their ensuing stories.
  • 48% of journalists and bloggers who subscribed to receive PRWeb news releases used an image or video in a news story or blog post.
3. Bloggers and journalists favor some forms of media over others – When it comes to various types of multimedia, content producers clearly favor images.
  • 88% of producers agree or strongly agree that images enhance their experience of a news release;
  • Half agree or strongly agree that video enhances their experience of a news release; and
  • Only 28% agreed that audio enhances a news release.

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