Feb
03
2010

Facebook Largest News Reader?

Marshall Kirkpatrick at Read Write Web had an interesting piece suggesting that Facebook could become the world’s leading news reader. A recent Facebook company blog entry encouraged members to set up a news feed on Facebook. Kirkpatrick contends that with a few tweeks, Facebook could become a major distribution force for news content.
The last time I wrote about feed readers, Google Reader was just about to overtake Bloglines. That was in May 2008 – things have changed. Google Reader’s growth continued (with some setbacks) until November 2009. Since then, visits have been dropping off. As Kirkpatrick mentions in his article, RSS readers never really reached “change-the-world feed-reading mass adoption.”
Last week, Google Reader accounted for .01% of upstream visits to News and Media websites, about the same level as a year ago. Google News accounted for 1.39% of visits and Facebook 3.52%. The following chart illustrates the increase over the past year in visits from Facebook to News and Media websites, relative to Google News.
Facebook and Google News to News Websites.png
Facebook was the #4 source of visits to News and Media sites last week, after Google, Yahoo! and msn (see table below). News and Media is the #11 downstream industry after Facebook, receiving 3.69% of the social networking site’s traffic. To offer a comparison, 6% of downstream traffic from Facebook went to Shopping and Classifieds last week and 6% to Business and Finance and 15% went to Entertainment websites (YouTube in particular). (Note, my colleague Heather Dougherty posted an entry on Social Networks and Retail traffic earlier this week).
Facebook could be a major disruptor to the News and Media category. And with the Wall Street Journal already publishing content to Facebook, perhaps the social network can avoid the run-ins that Google has suffered recently with Rupert Murdoch. We will continue to watch this space.
News and Media clickstream.png


  1. Hitwise: Facebook Becoming Major News And Media Distributor

    Heather Hopkins, senior analyst at Hitwise, which tracks traffic to large web sites, says Facebook is become a major news reader.Facebook was the #4 source of visits to News and Media sites last week, after Google, Yahoo! and msn. News and Media is the…

  2. Hitwise: Facebook Becoming Major News And Media Distributor

    Heather Hopkins, senior analyst at Hitwise, which tracks traffic to large web sites, says Facebook is become a major news reader.Facebook was the #4 source of visits to News and Media sites last week, after Google, Yahoo! and msn. News and Media is the…

    • Marshall Kirkpatrick
    • February 3rd, 2010

    Hi Heather, thanks for looking into this! Question: what % of online visits to news came from Google, Yahoo and MSN? Like, most of the remaining 95% after Facebook, Google News and Google Reader? I’m real curious and would like to know for my blog post about your blog post about my blog post. :)

  3. Facebook, premier lecteur d’informations ?

    Alors que les débats sur la presse en ligne tend à se focaliser sur la position de Google, accusé de profiter des contenus des journaux, les habitudes des internautes évoluent. Aux Etats-Unis, Facebook serait devenu en un an une source…

  4. Will Facebook Be the Biggest News Source on the Web?

    I have a question for you. Where do you get the majority of your online news? Is it from a feed reader

  5. Marshall, Sure thing – I’ve added a table above showing the top 10 sources of traffic to News and Media websites last week. We received the same question from a couple of other readers too. So a very good addition!
    Best, Heather

  6. Will Publishers Let Facebook Become the Web’s Biggest News Source?

    I have a question for you. Where do you get the majority of your online news? Is it from a feed reader

  7. Hi Heather,
    Great chart and analysis. I’m curious why Twitter isn’t tracked as a referrer to news sites. My experience is that they’re about #2 or #3 for MediaShift traffic after Google. But perhaps it’s difficult to track Twitter traffic from so many various apps and URL shorteners?

  8. Yes, I believe Facebook has a high loyal readership according to your figures.

  9. Interesting that Twitter doesn’t show up in the top 10 list. Surely all of those Twitter.com and Twitter client links must be adding up to some significant traffic.

  10. Facebook’s New Role: News Site

    Facebook, the news site? Hitwise runs the numbers and determines that the social network is now the fourth

  11. Hitwise: Facebook Becoming Major News And Media Distributor

    Heather Hopkins, senior analyst at Hitwise, which tracks traffic to large web sites, says Facebook is become a major news reader.Facebook was the #4 source of visits to News and Media sites last week, after Google, Yahoo! and msn. News and Media is the…

    • Mike
    • February 5th, 2010

    Was Twitter mesaured?

    • James Kittock
    • February 5th, 2010

    Interesting… can you generate a stacked line graph corresponding to your top 10 table? It would be interesting to see if it reveals which of the other upstream products are declining as FB’s share grows.

  12. Thanks for all the comments.
    Yes, Twitter was included. However, I should mention that we are tracking internet visits (not visits from mobile phones). Twitter.com accounted for 0.15% of upstream visits to News and Media sites last week.
    I’ll try to get a line graph for the top 10 table shortly…

  13. Facebook Grows as a Source for News

    Filed under: Google (GOOG) , Microsoft (MSFT) , Yahoo! (YHOO) , New York Times'A' (NYT) , News

    • Jamie
    • February 9th, 2010

    Interesting. Do ‘upstream visits’ mean clickthroughs? Or might users have navigated from FB to news sites via bookmarks, typing URLs, or whatever? Is there a way of isolating clickthroughs? We’d need to do that to really know whether FB is driving traffic to news or whether it’s just the large number of FB users that pushes it to #4. Incidentally the number of Twitter users is a tiny fraction of FB’s, so it’s not surprising it doesn’t compare.

  14. Hi Jamie, We are reporting any click – which as you can say can be from bookmarks, typing in a URL, etc. Through custom analysis we might be able to isolate clickthroughs. However, in what we currently have available, we report on the natural flow of traffic among websites – be that clicks on links or otherwise.
    Cheers, Heather

  15. Very interesting figures. From where comes the data? Google Analytics or your own statistics? I have learned that GA counts referrer very different from other statistic systems. If you go from FB to “site” and then back to FB again and after a while visit “site” via typing in the url GA still counts FB as a referrer.

  16. Hi Heather, thanks for looking into this

  17. Hitwise Uncovers Puzzling Difference Between Sharing News And Consuming It

    Heather Hopkins is senior online analyst at Hitwise, which monitors traffic to web sites for Experian. She writes that “Facebook Users Prefer Broadcast Media.”A couple of weeks ago, I posted an entry about Facebook becoming the largest news reader. Fac…

    • Steve Mitgang
    • March 2nd, 2010

    Great analysis. How does this convert to actual traffic. In other words, how many people is Facebook sending to the Weather Channel every month? Are there spikes during the week or around events?
    Thanks in advance.

  18. Hello,
    I am just discovering this article on a French blog,
    I love Google reader,
    Thanks

    • Mathieu
    • March 25th, 2010

    Wow you’re fixing data to go with what you want it to say. It’s hardly fair to take Facebook as a whole and compare it to only one small portion of Google rather than take all of Google’s domain. Google leaves Facebook in the dust. I thought journalists were supposed to be unbiased.

  19. good news for all social optimizers ;)

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