Locking in articles about social networks is crazy

The Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet has been very successful in attracting visitors to its website. Aftonbladet.se is Sweden’s second largest website, second only to MSN.se. It was one of the first papers (although not the first) to take blogging seriously, both with their own blog service and the acquisition of the blog portal Bloggportalen.se. But when other major media sites like the New York Times are unlocking content that was previously subscription only, Aftonbladet.se has chosen the opposite direction.

“What changed, The Times said, was that many more readers started coming to the site from search engines and links on other sites instead of coming directly to NYTimes.com. These indirect readers, unable to get access to articles behind the pay wall and less likely to pay subscription fees than the more loyal direct users, were seen as opportunities for more page views and increased advertising revenue.

“What wasn’t anticipated was the explosion in how much of our traffic would be generated by Google, by Yahoo and some others,” Ms. Schiller said.”

Today, Anders Westgårdh writes a column on Aftonbladet.se in which he states that Facebook is a fad that will soon disappear. Quite obviously, this is the kind of article that readers would blog about, comment, post to social networks etc etc which will attract new readers. But the article is behind a pay wall so none of that will happen.

Sure, its just one article, but to me it indicates that Aftonbladet is determined not to follow the path of the New York Times and the others. Personally I am not convinced that it is the correct thing to do, but then again I don’t have access to Aftonbladet’s site statistics.

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Aftonbladet shows blog links

Aftonbladet today started to link to blog posts that link to online articles (example here). But unlike all the other Swedish dailies which show blog links via the Twingly service, Aftonbladet chose to use its own blog portal Bloggportalen.se. On the site it says that the five most relevant comments are shown and to see all comments you need to go to Bloggportalen.se. It would be interesting to find out what factors that decide this relevance. [UPDATE: I didn’t read properly. Lotta Holmström writes that it is decided after how many incoming links a blog has.]

And since Aftonbladet.se is Sweden’s second largest website (MSN.se is no 1 according to KIA index) with close to 4 million visitors (unique web browsers) per week, prepare to see a major increase in blog links to Aftonbladet the coming weeks.

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Digga merges with Sovrat

The Swedish Digg clone Digga.se was urged by Digg to change its name. Digga decided not to contest the demands. The site has now merged with another similar site called Sovrat.se and is re-launched at Pusha.se.

Bloggers and online media can add a “Pusha” button to articles so users can push for interesting stuff. Tomorrow the application will make its debute on all articles on Svenska Dagbladet’s site svd.se. Pusha

Update: I noticed that Sydsvenskan.se already has a Pusha icon at the bottom of all articles.

The Washington Post gains audience from blogs

Editors Weblog writes that the Washington Post and the Guardian have added sponsored blog rolls to their sites.

“Although the Post hasn’t – yet – made a significant amount of money from its blog roll, Adify (which supplies the ad network technology) claims the blog roll has increased the site’s audience by more than 50%.”

Swedish media connect with Facebook

Both Expressen and Helsingborgs Dagblad have added Facebook functionality to their websites, writes Medievärlden. Users can now easily add content from the two papers to their Facebook profiles.

Update: Sydsvenskan too, says Pelle.

Update 2: And Nerikes Allehanda. Thanks Nicclas.

Update 3 (Oct 29): And Eskilstuna-Kuriren and Norrköpings Tidningar.

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NT up for award, but its RSS feed is a disaster

The Swedish media publication Medievärlden has nominated Norrköpings Tidningar (NT), Helsingborgs Dagblad and Aftonbladet.se to the award as Editorial Staff of the Year. NT, which is Sweden’s oldest newspaper, founded in 1758 and one of the world’s ten oldest newspapers, has been nominated for its multi-channel focus. A news editor, a tv editor and a web editor together decide what will be published on the paper’s different news channels.

– TV brings emotions, in the paper we give facts and on the web we have the speed, says Charli Nilsson at NT.

NT’s ambition to work across multiple platforms is worthy of praise, but the paper’s RSS feed is far from a success, to put it mildly. Once you click on a link, you get an error message telling you that the page has been moved (even if it is brand new) and that you need to click on a second link to find it. But that link doesn’t work either. All you get is a message that the article could not be found.

NT

It’s a miracle that NT has even 5 subscribers to its feed on Bloglines. If the paper plans to continue to publish an RSS feed it needs to make it work properly.

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