Theatlantic.com Traffic and Demographic Statistics by Quantcast

 

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Rankings

theatlantic.com

Monthly Uniques 6.0M US
  •  
  • Not Quantified

    Data is estimated

The Atlantic Monthly's home on the Internet, featuring current issues online alongside web-specific content on travel, literature, politics, and digital culture. [Description from dmoz]

Atlantic Media's truth is marching on. Atlantic Media Company's flagship publication, The Atlantic, was founded in Boston in 1857 by a group of writers that included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and was the first to publish the Battle Hymn of the Republic. Consultant David Bradley bought the magazine from publisher and real-estate magnate Mort Zuckerman in 1999 and installed Michael Kelly as editor. Kelly shifted the magazine from a literary to a news focus. He was killed covering Iraq in 2003. In order to cut costs, in 2005 Bradley moved operations from Boston to Washington, DC, home of his National Journal Group, which now operates under Atlantic Media. [Description from Hoover's]

This site reaches over 6.0 million U.S. monthly people.


Related Links

Web Demographics


Gender

Embed
segment this site vs. total internet indexmultiple
Male
55% 
49% internet average
 
1121.12x
Female
45% 
51% internet average
  890.89x
internet average
composition
 
Male 55%
 
Female 45%

}

Gender

male



Age

Embed
segment this site vs. total internet indexmultiple
< 18
5% 
18% internet average
  290.29x
18-24
14% 
12% internet average
 
1131.13x
25-34
21% 
17% internet average
 
1211.21x
35-44
20% 
19% internet average
 
1071.07x
45-54
21% 
17% internet average
 
1201.2x
55-64
12% 
10% internet average
 
1241.24x
65+
6% 
6% internet average
 
1121.12x
internet average
composition
 
< 18 5%
 
18-24 14%
 
25-34 21%
 
35-44 20%
 
45-54 21%
 
55-64 12%
 
65+ 6%

}

Age

older



Children in Household

Embed
segment this site vs. total internet indexmultiple
No Kids
64% 
51% internet average
 
1271.27x
Has Kids
36% 
49% internet average
  720.72x
internet average
composition
 
No Kids 64%
 
Has Kids 36%

}

Children in Household

no kids



Household Income

Embed
segment this site vs. total internet indexmultiple
$0-50k
15% 
18% internet average
  820.82x
$50-100k
22% 
26% internet average
  850.85x
$100-150k
24% 
28% internet average
  850.85x
$150k+
39% 
28% internet average
 
1411.41x
internet average
composition
 
$0-50k 15%
 
$50-100k 22%
 
$100-150k 24%
 
$150k+ 39%

}

Household Income

more affluent



Education Level

Embed
segment this site vs. total internet indexmultiple
No College
29% 
45% internet average
  640.64x
College
40% 
41% internet average
  970.97x
Grad School
31% 
14% internet average
2182.18x
internet average
composition
 
No College 29%
 
College 40%
 
Grad School 31%

}

Education Level

Graduate and Post Graduates



Ethnicity

Embed
segment this site vs. total internet indexmultiple
Caucasian
70% 
76% internet average
  920.92x
African American
10% 
9% internet average
 
1141.14x
Asian
10% 
4% internet average
2282.28x
Hispanic
9% 
9% internet average
  930.93x
Other
1% 
1% internet average
 
1001.0x
internet average
composition
 
Caucasian 70%
 
African American 10%
 
Asian 10%
 
Hispanic 9%
 
Other 1%

}

Ethnicity

Asian



Updated Feb 2013 • Delayed - Next: May 2013

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People from Sites & Syndicators

These percentages usually sum greater than 100% due to overlap in site and syndicated audiences.

Reading Demographic Graphs

1. Index

This compares audience composition of the site to the entire Internet population. The higher the index number, the more concentrated a site is in a particular demographic.

As an example, if a site indexes 100 for age 18-24, that means a given visitor to it is as likely to be 18-24 as any internet user chosen at random. An index of 200 means the visitor is twice as likely to be 18-24, 50 means half as likely, and so on.

2. Segments are represented with icons. Segments include gender, age, household income, and education.

3. Very High Indexes (over 200) are denoted with a plus symbol.

4. Internet Average is represented by the dotted vertical line.


Reading Demographic Graphs

This compares audience composition of the site to the entire Internet population. The higher the index number, the more concentrated a site is in a particular demographic.

As an example, if a site indexes 100 for age 18-24, that means a given visitor to it is as likely to be 18-24 as any internet user chosen at random. An index of 200 means the visitor is twice as likely to be 18-24, 50 means half as likely, and so on.

1. Segment refers to the demographic composition attribute.

2. Very High Indexes (over 200) are denoted with a plus symbol.

3. Internet Average is represented by the dotted vertical line.

4. Expand the data to see the numbers which make up the index calculation.

The expanded view shows the percentage composition, the Internet average and the multiple.

1. A Colored Bar indicates that a segment exceeds the Internet average, whereas a gray bar indicates the segment is below the Internet average. Internet average is represented by the dotted vertical line.

2. A Multiple is the percentage of the segment on this site divided by the average of the same segment on the entire Internet.

Example:
80% female segment on site ÷ 32% female internet average = 2.5x

This chart breaks down the site's audience for a demographic. All the segments collectively equal 100%.

As an example, if a site indexes 100 for age 18-24, that means a given visitor to it is as likely to be 18-24 as any internet user chosen at random. An index of 200 means the visitor is twice as likely to be 18-24, 50 means half as likely, and so on.

1. The Top-Indexing Segment is shown in color.


Understanding User Retention

This graph examines user retention patterns for a mobile app, which tells the story of how much of app's user base continues to use the app after installation over time.

1. The x-axis is comprised of cohorts based on when users installed the app. For example, if we look at the column "+3 Days", this means that regardless of whether users installed the app a week ago or a month ago, what ratio of these users have returned within three days after installation.

2. The gray bars indicate the average retention rate across all days the app was downloaded.

3. The yellow line represents the average retention rate by period of all apps measured by Quantcast.

4. Install grouping details can be found by clicking on the down arrow.

In the expanded view, each row shows the retention patterns based on a point in time. Click on each row to compare that cohort against the average of all users installing the app.

1. The average day row shows the general retention rate for the entire app.

2. The highlighted row shows the retention rate compared against the average. In this example, 29% of users who installed the app one month ago returned at some point within two days, compared to the average of 35%.

3. The Add Date button allows you to add custom dates to determine retention patterns.

4. The Close button collapses the details and returns you to the default view.


Understanding Visit Frequency

This chart shows the number of return visits for unique users over the last 30 days.

1. Toggle between visit patterns of Logged In and Non Logged In users. In order to enable the toggle, the publisher must designate that the app has a logged in user base. The Logged In number represents the visit frequency of users that have logged in order to use this app.

3. For example, over the last 30 days, 3,644 unique users visited 4-7 times.


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