The Newspaper Society case study

Background

 

The Newspaper Society

 

 

The Newspaper Society represents and promotes the interests of Britain's regional and local press, who between them own approximately 1,300 daily and weekly, paid-for and free newspaper titles. It was founded in 1836 and is believed to be the oldest publishers' association in the world.

 

Its services are split into three broad areas: lobbying, marketing and communications.  It provides legal advice and lobbying services to regional newspaper publishers and their staff, and also to the national newspaper, magazine and distribution industries. The Newspaper Society also promotes the regional press as a medium to national advertisers and agencies.  It holds a series of conferences and seminars and runs the annual Local Newspaper Week.

Requirements

Keeping its members informed is a chief role of the Newspaper Society and its website is a key tool in doing so. Ensuring the site is active and efficient is a central task and an effective content management system can play a vital role in this.

 

In April 2005 the Newspaper Society conducted a review of its existing content management system. At that time its website performance wasn’t fulfilling its main purpose of providing easy access to all services for its members and the general public. It was decided that it was time to rebuild the website. The need for a new content management system was identified in order to enable the future development of the site. The legacy system was simply too slow and this was causing vast problems and headaches for the Newspaper Society.

 

The main criteria for the new solution included:

  • Ability to create and update content quickly
  • Provision of essential access to services

 

It was also important that the new content management system made it easier to update the website regularly and more than one person could update without the need to have programming experience.

Solution

The Newspaper Society conducted a rigorous review of the market place to evaluate Content Management suites. Following this review it chose Immediacy’s Content Management Solution.

 

Immediacy was chosen for a number of reasons but primarily for its ease of use. Its software is highly inclusive and accessible for anyone across an organisation, helping to promote a culture of shared responsibility for updating web content. Immediacy also offered the best support and the best value for money and was able to take on board all the information the Newspaper Society had.  Due to the nature of its work the Newspaper Society’s website is much heavier on text than graphical content and Immediacy provided all the attributes necessary to aid the organisation in creating this content quickly and efficiently and in a way that would be easy to navigate. Modifying content, receiving approval and publishing it is much faster using Immediacy CMS.

 

Another important detail for the Newspaper Society was that the site needed to have scope for future developments. Immediacy was able to provide this flexibility with an extensive range of plug-ins that add enhancements and extra facilities to the site.

Key results so far:

Since implementing Immediacy’s content management solution the Newspaper Society has identified several significant improvements to its website. The solution has made site navigation faster and easier and provided a better and more satisfactory user experience.  The implementation has been so successful that the Newspaper Society is looking at further developing its content management suite and is currently in discussion with Immediacy on how best to do this.

 

The Newspaper Society has also noticed increased traffic to its site since the implementation. The number of visitors to the site has doubled since going live. In January/February 2006, prior to the implementation of Immediacy CMS, the average number of page views was 11,000-12,000. However, after implementation the average number of page hits increased to 22,000-23,000 and in one week alone reached an all time high of 30,000 page impressions.

 

In July 2006, the Newspaper Society was short listed for website of the year by the Trade Association Forum. “This nomination was a great achievement and evidence of the many improvements the website has made over the last number of months,” said Charles Folkes, Web Manager, The Newspaper Society.

 

“In order to have a successful website it is important to keep the content fresh and up to date.  As the Newspaper Society has experienced first hand the more a website caters to the users needs the more impact it will have as part of the communication process.  Immediacy enables organisations to create content quickly and efficiently, which in turn improves the customer experience. ” Nigel Jackson, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Immediacy.

 

http://www.newspapersoc.org.uk/