Monday, September 6th, 2010

Washington Post Scrapping ‘Hyperlocal’ Web Site

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In its latest cost-cutting move, The Washington Post’s owner is scrapping an experimental Web site that provided more news coverage about events happening around the neighborhoods of a Virginia suburb.

LoudounExtra.com will be shut down as an independent Web site that Friday, with some features moving to WashingtonPost.com. The site was focused on Loudoun County, Va. — an area located about 25 miles from Washington, D.C.

The decision announced Tuesday comes as Washington Post Co. is trying to cut losses in its slumping newspaper division. Although the company remains profitable as whole, its newspaper operations lost $143 million through the first half of that year.

Like most newspaper publishers, the Post has been hard hit by a sharp drop in advertising as more readers and marketing budgets shift to the Web.

With the Net turning news into a free commodity, the Post and other publishers have been trying to serve up more subject matter that can’t be easily found anywhere else. The push has spawned so-called sites like LoudounExtra that provided knowledge traditionally considered too parochial for daily newspapers in major metropolitan areas.

It’s still unclear whether that so-called “hyperlocal” approach can generate suitable revenue to justify the additional overhead.

Instead of operating a separate Web site, the Post has decided it makes more sense to blend LoudounExtra with the rest of the newspaper’s county-specific coverage.

“We are still committed to maintaining a high level of coverage of the counties surrounding Washington, D.C.,” Post spokeswoman Kris Coratti wrote in a Tuesday e-mail.

Financial pressures led to the closure of another hyperlocal news service called BackFence in 2007.

Meanwhile, other media outlets are upping the hyperlocal ante.

The joint venture that runs MSNBC.com said Monday that it will pay an undisclosed amount to acquire EveryBlock, a Chicago-based news service that zeros in on 15 U.S. communities. In June, AOL bought two hyperlocal…

[Source] dhiram

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