Dagens industri(Di) is afinancial newspaperintabloidformat published inStockholm,Sweden.[1]

Dagens industri
FormatTabloid
Owner(s)Bonnier AB
Editor-in-chiefPeter Fellman
Managing editorJonas Jonsson
Founded1976;48 years ago(1976)
Political alignmentIndependentliberal-conservative
LanguageSwedish
HeadquartersStockholm, Sweden
Circulation101,700 (2010)
ISSN0346-640X
Websitehttp://di.se/
One ofMalmö Aviation'sAvro RJ100sin the special "Dagens Industri" livery.

History and profile

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Dagens industriwas founded in 1976[2][3]with two issues per week. In 1983 it increased itsperiodicityto five issues per week[3]and to six in 1990.[4]It has since started affiliate newspapers inAustria,Estonia(Äripäev),Latvia(Dienas Bizness[lv]),Lithuania(Verslo žinios),Poland(Puls Biznesu),Russia(Delovoy Peterburg),ScotlandandSlovenia(Poslovni dnevnik Finance).Dagens Industriis owned by the Swedish family-owned media groupBonnier AB[5][6]and is published intabloid format.[7]

The stated position of the editorial page is independentliberal-conservative.[8]The newspaper's online edition,di.se,has been voted as Sweden's "best economics online site" 20 years in a row between 1999 and 2019, in a competition held by the PR-firm Hallvarsson & Halvarsson.[9]

In January 2016, former Managing Editor Lotta Edling succeeded Peter Fellman as the editor-in-chief ofDagens industri.[6]Fellman returned as editor-in-chief in August 2018.

Circulation

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The 1983 circulation ofDagens industriwas 30,000 copies.[4]Its circulation was 100,000 copies in 2000.[4]It was 115,000 copies in 2003.[10]The paper had a circulation of 117,500 copies on weekdays in 2005.[5]Its circulation was 101,700 copies in 2010.[1]

According to the media surveyOrvesto,Dagens industri had 328,000 daily readers of their printed issue during the beginning of 2017.[9]

In March 2020, Dagens industri reached 100,000 paying subscribers, across the printed issue and online edition.[11]

References

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  1. ^ab"Dagens Industri".Nationalencyklopedin(in Swedish).Retrieved25 March2011.(subscription required)
  2. ^Håkan Lindgren (2006)."On Virgin Soil. Entrepreneurship in Swedish Financial Journalism in the 1960s and 1970s"(Conference paper).Helsinki.Retrieved18 November2014.
  3. ^abStig Hadenius; Lennart Weibull (1999)."The Swedish Newspaper System in the Late 1990s. Tradition and Transition"(PDF).Nordicom Review.1(1).Retrieved31 December2014.
  4. ^abcMaria Grafström (2006)."The Development of Swedish Business Journalism"(PhD Thesis).Uppsala University.Retrieved29 November2014.
  5. ^ab"Swedish mass media"(PDF).Swedish Institute. 2006. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 25 September 2013.Retrieved18 November2014.
  6. ^ab"Dagens industri".Bonnier Business Press. Archived fromthe originalon 13 July 2016.Retrieved3 July2016.
  7. ^"Newspapers Next Generation"(PDF).Boström Design and Development.2009. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 29 May 2016.Retrieved12 February2015.
  8. ^"Ledare: Busch Thor gör SD till ett borgerligt parti".Omni.Retrieved9 August2017.
  9. ^abDi."Om oss".Di.se.Retrieved9 August2017.
  10. ^"World Press Trends"(PDF).Paris: World Association of Newspapers. 2004. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 8 February 2015.Retrieved15 February2015.
  11. ^Di."Drömgränsen spräckt – nu har vi 100.000 prenumeranter".Dagens industri.Retrieved3 August2020.
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