Theorizing Online News Consumption: A Structural Model Linking Preference, Use, and Paying Intent
H. Iris Chyi, Ph.D.Assistant ProfessorSchool of JournalismThe University of Texas at Austin
Angela M. Lee, M.A.Doctoral StudentSchool of JournalismThe University of Texas at Austin
Paper presented at the 13th International Symposium on Online Journalism, Austin, Texas, April 20-21, 2012
Online news consumption
• Three distinct factors• Use: Major concern in academic
research• Preference• (Chyi & Lasorsa, 1999, 2002; Chyi &
Chang, 2009; Chyi & Lee, 2012)
• Intention to pay • (Chyi 2005; Chyi, 2012)
What we know
• Preference ≠ Use• Consumers do not always use what
they prefer.
• Use ≠ Intention to pay• Most are not willing to pay for what
they use.
What we don’t know
• Exactly how these factors relate to each other
• The influence of other variables • Age• Gender• News interest• Related media goods (e.g., print
edition)
Purpose of this study
• To clarify the interrelationship among preference, use, and paying intent for online news, which
• explains why most newspapers have difficulties monetizing online usage
Proposing holistic models• Mapping key predictors of online
news consumption – Model 1• Age• Gender• News interest• Format Preference• Online Use• Online Paying Intent
Proposing holistic models• Mapping key predictors of online
news consumption – Model 2• Age• Gender• News interest• Format Preference• Online Use• Online Paying Intent• Print Use
Method
• Online survey of 767 U.S. adults (18 years and older)
• Data collection: August 3-6, 2010• The weighted sample is
reasonably representative of the U.S. Internet population.
Analytical tool• Structural Equation Modeling (SEM)
– ML estimation of simultaneous
multiple regression analyses• Calculate the pure effect of key variables
within the nexus of complex news consumption models
• Test statistical fitness of theoretical models• Goodness of Fit tests
Results: Model 1
Results: Model 2
Key findings
• The results distinguished preference from use• Format preference only has a minor
influence on online news use (b = .16 to .18, p < .001).
• Use is not strongly associated with paying intent (b = .12 in both models, p < .01).
Determinants of paying intent
• As many as five factors (age, gender, news interest, preference, and online news use) have direct impacts on paying intent. • Age (b = -.21 in both models, p
< .001) and news interest (b = .18 in both models, p < .001) are the strongest predictors.
Implications
• News consumption is a multifaceted behavioral construct.
• While younger people are more likely to pay for online news, they tend to have lower interest in news compared with other age groups.• Future research on potential intervention
measures to promote news interest among young adults may explore the progression from interest, use, to paying intent, as proposed by this study.
Thank you.
H. Iris [email protected]
www.newmediaresearch.org
Angela M. [email protected]
@angelamlee