We will get right into what we want to share with you this morning. We want to share the challenges that our industry has faced since 2009-10.
I want to explain how our business works. Basically, a company like ours, or an independent like Benoit's, in the weekly business we solely live on advertising dollars. We have to pay for the content, the journalists, the salesmen, the printing, and we pay for the distribution that in our case is total market coverage for most of our product. We send a paper to every home, so we don't have any subscription revenue. The readers don't pay anything for the content. We live solely on ad dollars for our community paper.
Some of our dailies in Atlantic Canada would have about 20% to 25% of their revenue coming from readers paying through subscriptions or through the newsstands, but the bulk of the industry is living on advertising, as I'm sure you've heard. Advertisers for many years, for decades, have supported and paid for the local content that citizens enjoy.
Who are our advertisers and those businesses? They are local businesses, local and regional businesses, not the big retailer and the national retailer. Those people deal transcontinentally with different flyers for their deals and they tend to advertise less in weekly papers. Our advertisers are local in nature and our readers are local in nature.
Basically what we have done, moving to why we're here in a sense, is very well expressed on page 5. Since 2005, we have seen the Internet.... At that point it was about $500 million that they were capturing in ad dollars, and in 2014 it was $3.8 billion. So the Internet is capturing advertising dollars away from traditional TV, specialty TV, radio, and daily newspapers, and also community newspapers.
It's fair to say that community papers, with a lot of local content, have been less affected than the other media, but things have changed in the last 24 months. Where we were seeing a 2%, 3%, or 4% decrease three or four years ago, and daily newspapers were suffering a 10% to 15% decrease, now we're getting into the same zone.
From that graph, the blue bar, which is the advertising market for all community papers across Canada, you can see that all of our papers—our paper, Metroland papers, all the independent papers across Canada—at the peak in 2009 were capturing about $1.2 billion in ad revenue, and in 2010 it started to go down. You can see that in 2014 we had lost 36% of our ad revenue.
I can tell you what the number is in 2015, and I am running the business in 2016. I can tell you now, to make a round number, that we have lost about 50% of our revenue.
If your business is living on only ad dollars and you lose 50% of your revenue, whether it's media or any kind of business, you need to react. You cannot lose half of your revenue and run the same business model.
Where is that money going? It's going to people who produce zero local content; people like Facebook, Google, all those guys. They are aggregators of content and they are people who do social media which is, in French we say les discussions de perron d'église. This is not a church porch discussion, this is not curated content. They don't produce content but they capture a lot of the ad dollars.
What have we done as an industry? For sure, we didn't come here to ask you to do our job. We've been doing our job in the last five years and when you lose 50% of your revenue, you have two things you can do. You try to catch the digital wave, so we invested a lot in digital, and produced a lot of digital product around content, some not around content, some around advertising.
For Transcontinental, we capture about 10% of our business, which is now digital. On $240 million we generate $24 million of digital revenue. Our digital products are very much liked by the community, but you can see the relationship. You lose 50% of your revenue. And when you capture the wave of trying to create new revenue, you create only 10%, so you still have a big gap.
The second thing we've looked at is our costs, and if we cannot make the shortfall on revenue we have to look at our costs. Transcontinental being a consolidator in that industry helped a lot in making sure that we took a lot of costs out of the system through economies of scale, best-practice sharing, and stuff like that.
In a sense, the fact that we are a large group saved a lot of papers that would have died on their own, not having the means of a large corporation. We cut on the printing costs, on the distribution costs, on the administration costs, on the sales costs. The only place we cannot cut is on the content because the content is the heart of what we do. If we cut there, we don't have a product. We're done.
Basically, also we have a lot of challenges—