By the Numbers: 2013 a year of solid growth for latimes.com - Los Angeles Times
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By the Numbers: 2013 a year of solid growth for latimes.com

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This is our annual look at the last year through the lens of metrics that we call “By the Numbers.” It’s intended to serve as a complementary note to Davan’s review of the year’s great journalism. Happily, they overlap.

And the news is good. Our journalism is being read more than ever before. In every category.

We continued to expand our audience in real-time, enterprise and investigative coverage. We grew our social media presence by record numbers. Mobile readership is up. Interactivity is up. Video views are up. We’ve grown significantly.

Let's first look at a couple of goals we set for ourselves at the beginning of the year. We wanted to increase the extent of digital reporting across the newsroom. More participation. The total number of blog posts grew by more than 5%, increasing from 58,412 posts to 61,430.

Next, we wanted to improve our social media participation by having 100% of our bylined journalists on Twitter and Google+. Done and done. Congratulations. Everyone is signed up. Most are participating. The journalism website Muckrack identified the L.A. Times as having the second-highest growth among newsrooms on Twitter for the year.

Page Views

In terms of readership, page views were up 7% to nearly 2.4 billion page views. This is an impressive gain in spite of a Google algorithm change in August that had a big, but temporary, impact. Also, non-subscribers had free access to fewer of our articles in 2013. A 7% gain is solid.

Monthly Uniques

Monthly uniques continue to grow. More and more people are coming to read our journalism. This number grew by 12% in 2013, with more than 490 million uniques.

Real-Rime Coverage (Blogs)

Our real-time coverage was stronger than ever in 2013. The Christopher Dorner manhunt, the LAX shooting and our entertainment awards coverage were just a few of the big events last year that brought a record number of people to the Los Angeles Times.

Overall blog traffic increased by an impressive 28% from 742 million page views to 950 million page views.

Our local blog, L.A. Now, continues to gain readership, growing by 23% to nearly 160 million page views, while Movies Now grew 221% to 79 million in 2013. Nearly every blog saw growth: Food blog Daily Dish increased the most (418%), and Science Now grew 349%.

Column Ones (Great Reads)

We reinvented how Column One is presented online in an effort to bring more readers to our signature, standout daily story. We re-branded them “Great Reads” and added a custom template, making for a greatly improved reader experience.

The result: Almost triple the traffic to some of our best journalism within six months [2.9 million page views compared with 1.1 million in the six months before the alterations]. Since we changed things up, more than 5.3 million readers have read our Column Ones.

Big Projects

In 2013, some of our other time- and labor-intensive projects also benefited from the custom templates as well as the work of our social media team.

Our five-part series on the Christopher Dorner manhunt by Christopher Goffard, Joel Rubin, Kurt Streeter, Louis Sahagun and Phil Willon and illustrated by Doug Stevens generated nearly one million page views. Other major projects were each read more than 100,000 times:

This is our best journalism and deserved even more attention, which is why we will continue to make a concerted effort to fine-tune the presentation and distribution of these stories – headlines, social media and more – to expand the audience.

From Print to Digital

In 2013, several of our longtime print journalists moved further into the digital space. The idea was to have these respected voices participating in the digital conversation and bringing their insights, experience and writing skills to real-time journalism. Michael Hiltzik and Robin Abcarian stood out. Blogs were created for each and quickly found an audience. Although the blogs were started late in the year, each were read more than 3.5 million times.

Social Media Referrals

Great effort in the newsroom. With 100% adoption of Twitter and Google+ by all bylined journalists, we continue to meet readers where they are.

Overall social media referrals were up 15.7% from 2012. Twitter led that charge with a 73% increase in page views and 84% increase in visitors.

Followers on our main @LAtimes Twitter account grew by 75% from 420k followers to 732K followers. Individual journalist accounts increased by 46% to 3.3 million followers.

Facebook likes skyrocketed by 82% in 2013. And total social media connections (Facebook, Twitter, Google+, YouTube, Tumblr, LinkedIn and other accounts) grew by 48% year-over-year to 6.4 million.

No More Robots

In 2013, we demonstrated the importance of eliminating robots from our Twitter accounts. As soon as we switched the L.A. Now account from automatic RSS tweets to L.A. Now staff, followers grew by 25%. For the year, L.A. Now increased its followers to more than 82,000 — an annual growth rate of 64%. We’ll be doing this sitewide in 2014.

Mobile

Mobile exploded by 71% in 2013 from 433 million page views to 741 million. Not surprisingly, breaking news coverage performs really well on mobile phones and other devices. L.A. Now continues to see rapid growth on mobile; many days, the blog pulls in more readers on mobile than on desktop. Case in point: our coverage of the death of film star Paul Walker. The incident occurred over the weekend, and there was significantly more readership on mobile. A social media roundup of celebrity reaction to his death received 4.8 million page views on mobile compared with 2.7 million page views on desktop. As people on the go looked for the latest news, we were there.

Video Views

Video continues to grow -- by 30% in 2013 with 21 million video views. Engagement also rose 50%. This is an area we expect to grow dramatically in the year ahead.

Data Desk

In 2013, the Data Desk contributed to a wide range of graphics, maps and databases that enhanced our coverage of awards season, the mayoral campaign, crime, our test kitchen and the manhunt for Christopher Dorner. The team’s analysis and Web development powered numerous investigations and enterprise stories, including the earthquakes, badge and LAFD packages.

Conventional stories aside, the Data Desk developed pages that generated more than 23 million page views. The 10 most-viewed pages were:

  1. The Homicide Report
  2. Mapping L.A.
  3. California Cookbook
  4. Document: L.A. 2013
  5. L.A. mayoral maps and results
  6. Jonathan Gold’s 101 best restaurants
  7. The Manhunt for Christopher Dorner
  8. Document: Manhunt manifesto
  9. Timeline: The Christopher Dorner manhunt
  10. Timeline: Gay marriage chronology

Interactive

We continued to ramp up our interactive efforts in 2013 primarily with live blogging, live interactive video chats and live textual chats.

Live Video Chats

Breaking news and entertainment performed particularly well for us in live video, with the following video conversations receiving the highest viewership.

  1. Search for Christopher Dorner
  2. Manhunt in Boston
  3. Part-timers hurt by healthcare law
  4. Boston manhunt: the role of media
  5. Tatiana Maslany of “Orphan Black”
  6. Aaron Paul of “Breaking Bad”
  7. Post-mortem on “Breaking Bad”
  8. Jackie Chan on his film “Chinese Zodiac”
  9. Samsung Galaxy Gear
  10. Jessica Lange of “American Horror Story”

Live Text Chats

The newsroom also hosted 258 live text chats in 2013, on topics including breaking local news, restaurant tips and arts and entertainment. These text conversations generated more than 2 million page views: The following are the top five text chats:

  1. Charles McNulty on the Tonys
  2. Lunchtime with Jonathan Gold (November 13)
  3. L.A. Now Live: Bell corruption trial
  4. L.A. Now Live: Mayor Garcetti appointments
  5. Lunchtime with Jonathan Gold (October 16)

Live Blogging

This was the year that our live blogging really took off. We scheduled live blogging on dozens of events including the Emmys, the final episode of “Breaking Bad,” the government shutdown, and the YouTube Music Awards. Our most successful live blog – on the LAX shooting – had more than 700,000 unique visitors who spent an average of 25 minutes on the page. We will increase our efforts here.

Photography/Framework

Framework, our visuals department blog, continues to produce strong numbers (58.8 million page views) thanks to our audience’s appetite for great photography and video.

The list of galleries below produced the largest numbers of views, while the addition of several features such as reFramed" which explores traditional and nontraditional genres of photography, and Outtakes, featuring details and moments from our photography staff that didn’t make the original cut, has helped build upon Framework’s already broad audience.

Tech Tips" and "From the Archives" remain two of our viewer’s favorite categories.

Most-Viewed Galleries

  1. Being a girl every day
  2. Best of Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival 2013
  3. State of emergency declared in wildfire near Yosemite
  4. 124th Tournament of Roses Parade

More on Blogs

Top 10 Most-Read Blogs                                    Page Views                            Growth Rate

Top Increase in # of Blog Posts

Top Increase in Blog Traffic

More on Social Media

Most influential journalists on Twitter (as measured by Total Engagement: retweets, replies, mentions and favorites)


Individual Twitter Accounts That Grew the Most


Top Core Account Growth

Bylines

Most-Read Bylines

Most Referrals From Twitter

Most-Read Stories in 2013

OP-ED: How not to say the wrong thing

By Susan Silk and Barry Goldman

(2,187,520 page views)


Live: LAX shooting: 'Multiple victims' hit; at least 7 hurt

By Richard Winton, Brian Bennett, Joel Rubin, Joseph Serna, Ari Bloomkatz, Samantha Schaefer, Kate Mather, Matt Stevens and Laura J. Nelson

(1,230,789 page views)


Miley Cyrus' VMA performance: Media react in shock

By Patrick Kevin Day

(1,096,986 page views)


Paul Walker death: Video shows fire moments after fatal crash

By Los Angeles Times Staff

(958,852 page views)


Christopher Dorner manhunt

Christopher Goffard, Joel Rubin, Kurt Streeter, Louis Sahagun and Phil Willon and illustrated by Doug Stevens

(957,261 page views)


Paul Walker crash: Detectives probe how fast Porsche was going

By James Barragan, Samantha Schaefer and Adolfo Flores

(886,821 page views)


Fast and Furious' star Paul Walker dies in car crash

By Carla Rivera

(882,548 page views)


Big rig carrying fruit crashes on 210 Freeway, creates jam

By Joseph Serna

(851,196 page views)


A black box in your car? Some see a source of tax revenue

By Evan Halper

(804,758 page views)


Louisville's Kevin Ware breaks leg trying to block shot [Video]

By Dan Loumena

(753,136 page views)


Floyd Mayweather Jr. beats Canelo Alvarez: round-by-round recap

By Lance Pugmire

(752,014 page views)


Some health insurance gets pricier as Obamacare rolls out

By Chad Terhune

(699,802 page views)


Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell bail out of their Malibu beach house

By Lauren Beale

(689,075 page views)


Update: Videos point to 2 suspects in Boston Marathon bombing

By Richard A. Serrano and Ken Dilanian

(661,204 page views)


Navy Yard shooter 'had a pattern of misconduct'

By Richard Simon, David S. Cloud and Brian Bennett

(623,715 page views)


Paul Walker dead: Investigators look at speed, crash impact

By Carla Rivera and Shelby Grad

(593,190 page views)


Sharon Osbourne 'devastated' but not divorcing Ozzy, she says

By Christie DZurilla

(584,552 page views)


Dark, massive asteroid to fly by Earth on May 31

By Deborah Netburn

(558,642 page views)


Oscars 2013: 'Argo' best picture in night of redemption for Ben Affleck

By Susan King and Rene Lynch

(543,602 page views)


Kanye West, Kim Kardashian choose baby name North West. Stop laughing.

By Nardine Saad

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