There is a common perception that newspaper media is struggling. We know. Newspapers tend to be the ones reporting on it.
Part of the challenge the industry faces is its own making because we keep looking back at what newspapers used to be. We long for the days of 80% weekly PRINT market penetration and being the only game in town. But the truth is, the world has changed — not just for newspapers.
It used to be that media meant newspapers, television, and radio. Today, if you ask someone to list the various mediums, the list grows ever more expansive, incorporating not just traditional news media but also social media, blogs, podcasts, vlogs, video shorts, and now even AI-driven content.
In short, the media market has more players and is much more fragmented.
Newspaper media organizations need to stop focusing on yesteryear. Instead, it’s time to reframe our perspective given this new market. And when we do that—when we truly analyze where newspaper media in Nebraska stands in comparison to all other media—we find that Nebraska newspapers are in a strong position in a fragmented market.
Consider the following data:
While overall print/digital replica readership in Nebraska declined by 10%, there are promising signs of growth:
That’s a remarkable achievement in today’s fragmented media landscape.
Beyond audience numbers, we need to recognize the deeper role newspapers play in their communities. The data is clear: communities with newspapers tend to have lower taxes, less government corruption, better-performing schools, and healthier communities.
Subscribing to a newspaper—whether in print or digital—isn’t just about staying informed. It’s an investment in the well-being of your community.
Likewise, when advertisers use the diverse marketing options that newspaper media provides, they are not only running effective, brand-safe, and trusted campaigns—they are making a positive impact on their local economy.
Why do newspaper make such a difference to their communities?
Newspapers don’t just serve their readers—they serve the entire news ecosystem. While they make up only 25% of the media landscape, they account for 50% of all original reporting. That means when a newspaper closes, all other forms of media — including other legacy outlets, digital and social media — lose one of their primary news sources.
Part of the reason for this is that newspaper media has been, and remains, one of the most trusted media sources, consistently ranking first or second across various studies. Readers turn to newspapers for credible, in-depth reporting, which is why newspapers continue to play such a critical role in shaping the news that other media outlets rely on.
Newspaper media needs to reframe how it tells its story – to stop defining themselves by what they used to be and start owning the role they still play today. Newspapers must stop looking backward and instead build for the future—based on changing audience needs and evolving media habits.
It’s time to rebrand newspaper media—not as a struggling industry, but as an indispensable, evolving, and still dominant player in Nebraska’s media landscape.