Country newspapers’ bright future: Report’s blueprint for success

The country newspaper has never been more important to local communities, according to a new independent study released last week, and so governments could and should be doing more to communicate with local communities via local newspapers.

The report authors recommended governments at all levels should be revising their advertising rules to support local news providers and better target regional and rural communities.

These are two of 22 recommendations from the study, ‘Media Innovation and the Civic Future of Australia’s Country Press’, which is the culmination of a three-year Australian Research Council project led by Deakin University in partnership with the nation’s peak local news lobby, Country Press Australia, and RMIT University.

Project lead, Professor Kristy Hess from Deakin’s School of Communications and Creative Arts, said the project’s aim was to examine the local media landscape to identify challenges and opportunities for sustainability and innovation.

“We wanted to examine the challenges facing small-town news providers given the commentary in recent years about the crisis they are facing in Australia and across the world,” she said.

This was the first comprehensive report of its kind in Australia, and its recommendations provide a blueprint to preserve and grow rural and regional news for future generations, she added.

The study began at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in the temporary or permanent closure of dozens of local mastheads across Australia, and a shift among some to digital-only platforms.

“The first thing we did was conduct a major national survey to find out what people valued about their local mastheads," Prof Hess explained.

"We found people in many regional and rural towns and cities were passionate about their local mastheads but rejected an overreliance on syndicated content, in print and digital, sourced from neighbouring areas or other parts of the country,” she added.

The research team conducted two main national surveys – one with local news audiences and one with those who do not engage with local news. They conducted 35 interviews with Australian news editors and proprietors, and seven interpretive focus groups with editors, journalists and advertising managers within the Country Press Australia network.

One key finding was the strain on local mastheads hit with lost revenue from local, state and federal government advertising, which in recent years had prioritised social media and metropolitan news outlets which claim a larger digital reach.

That has left many people living in regional and rural areas in the dark about government activities.

“Our research found there is this obsession with digital reach. That’s all well and good, but a local masthead, whether in print or online, isn’t designed to reach one million people," Prof Hess said.

"If we use the digital reach metric as an indicator as to which news outlets should get government advertising, these independent regional and rural outlets are going to lose out every time.”

The report supports a recent Parliamentary Inquiry recommendation that stipulates 20 per cent of all Federal Government advertising expenditure be directed to regional and rural news organisations.

Data from the study also showed government funding schemes for local news outlets were often tied to digital innovation, for instance to buy drones and other technologies, when what local news providers needed was financial support to upgrade print infrastructure or to hire more staff.

“Print is not dead for many regional and rural communities. We need to remember there is a digital divide in Australia that means some communities still struggle with poor-quality and unreliable internet connections.

"Some segments of the community, including older citizens, find it difficult to use newer technologies. Younger audiences also like the look of a printed newspaper,” she said, referring to the surveys conducted.

The report also recommends better incentives, including pay, to attract seasoned reporters to the regions. Governments are also urged to provide seed funding for journalist-led news start-ups to counteract local ‘news deserts’ developing in some parts of Australia.

“Our research shows people in these communities want more local news content, including stories on locals’ achievements, successes and milestones. They also want news on local events and more investigative-type pieces,” Prof Hess said.

“We also found there is more capacity for regional and rural news providers to develop collaborative advocacy and solutions-style reporting campaigns that address important rural and regional issues that span multiple communities,” she concluded.