Straits Times and Channel NewsAsia online traffic

Channel NewsAsia is still more popular than the Straits Times online. The Straits Times’ Google PageRank, in fact, is the same as Mr Brown’s. Yes, the popular Singapore blog has the same PageRank as Singapore’s leading newspaper. The 24-hour Singapore TV news station Channel NewsAsia’s PageRank is just one level higher.

Straitstimes_traffic_data

The Straits Times

Channel_newsasia_traffic_data

Channel NewsAsia

Channel NewsAsia is ahead in Alexa Traffic rankings too. Alexa rankings are not conclusive proof of a website’s popularity, but Channel NewsAsia beats the Straits Times in social networking too, with more bookmarks, posts and links in Delicious, Digg, Reddit, Technorati and Wikipedia.

Straits_times_social_popularity 

The Straits Times

Channel_newsasia_social_pop 

Channel NewsAsia

Channel NewsAsia has the advantage of being a free site. The Straits Times allows only limited free access.

The Straits Times’ search engine optimization has improved. It now shows up much more often on Google News.

The Straits Times gets most traffic from Singapore, the USA, China, India and Malaysia in that order and Channel NewsAsia from Singapore, China, the USA, India and Indonesia.

Here is a look at the traffic and social popularity of the Straits Times and Channel NewsAsia.

Straits Times online, according to Google

It's been more than a month since Singapore's leading newspaper, the Straits
Times, and its website were relaunched on August 8. I see the newspaper only on
Saturdays, so I don't know if it has reported any increase in its circulation.
But the Straits Times online traffic has not  gone up dramatically enough to
make it one of the top sites in Singapore. However, AsiaOne, the old Singapore
Press Holdings portal which links to all its newspapers, is on the top 20 list
of internet traffic monitor Hitwise. AsiaOne is 19th in the Hitwise
rankings for August.

1google.com.sg
2sg.yahoo.com
3www.google.com
4mail.live.com
5www.youtube.com
6www.facebook.com
7www.msn.com
8www.friendster.com
9sg.search.yahoo.com
10www.gmail.com
11mail.yahoo.com.sg
12www.blogger.com
13www.msn.com.sg
14www.wikipedia.com
15mail.yahoo.com
16www.paypal.com
17www.yahoo.com
18forums.hardwarezone.com.sg
19www.asiaone.com
20sg.news.com.yahoo

AsiaOne  ranks 64th among all the sites visited by internet users in
Singapore, according to Alexa, another internet traffic monitor. But the Straits Times
does not figure on its list of top 100 Singapore sites.

Alexa can't measure total internet traffic, but one can't deny the authority
of Google, the No 1 search engine, and this where the Straits Times does badly.
Yesterday, I wrote that the Straits Times website is not search engine
optimised. And it shows in the following screenshots.

 

Continue Reading

The most popular Singapore websites

It says something about Singapore and its mainstream media that the most visited Singapore website is not a news or an education site but a bank. DBS Bank, owned by the Singapore sovereign wealth fund Temasek Holdings, is the most visited Singapore website, according to Alexa, the web information company.

Even a few Singapore bloggers are doing better than the mainstream media by getting into the Technorati top 100 list.

Singapore Entrepreneurs is the most popular Singapore blog, according to Technorati. It ranks 37th on Technorati’s top 100 list of blogs, based on the number of fans (451). There’s no Singapore blog on the Technorati top 100 list based on authority, or the number of links to a blog.

I must add these were the rankings when I visited Alexa and Technorati half an hour ago. The rankings can and do change often.

No joy for The Straits Times, Business Times, The New Paper and Today

I checked the two sites today because of a Straits Times Online report about a blog war between Xiaxue and another Singapore woman blogger. Xiaxue gets 50,000 visitors — or did it say “hits? — a day, said the Straits Times, and the other woman 30,000 a day. Hugely impressed, I moseyed over to Alexa. I am not sure how much weightage we should give to its figures. But here are its figures for Singapore. And it’s bad news for the local media.

Stomp, the Straits Times interactive portal, ranks 68th on the list. Straits Times Online doesn’t even come in the top 100, nor do the other two Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) English newspapers: Business Times and The New Paper. But Asia One, the other SPH site, ranks 61st.

The most popular Singapore news site is Channel NewsAsia, ranked 55th. Its MediaCorp stablemate, the freesheet Today, is nowhere in the top 100.

The most visited education site is the Ministry of Education, in 47th place, followed by the National University of Singapore, in 51st. They are separated by the Internet Movie Database (48th), Pornhub.com (49th) and Streetdirectory.com (50th). Nanyang Technological University is 64th.

The most visited Singapore site is DBS Bank, at 17th spot.

  • Number one on the list is Yahoo followed by
  • Google.com.sg
  • YouTube
  • Windows Live
  • Blogger.com
  • Friendster
  • Google
  • Microsoft Network
  • Facebook
  • Wikipedia
  • Live Journal
  • Go
  • ESPN Sportszome
  • Photobucket
  • WordPress.com
  • Baidu.

That’s the top 16 followed by DBS Bank.

SingNet is 24th, Singapore Pools 25th, Adult Friendfinder 26th, Hardwarezone 27th and Singapore Cable Vision 37th. Flickr is 22nd.

   

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