As newspapers around the world struggle with revenue, News Corp Australia’s Melbourne tabloid the Herald Sun is trying a bold idea to lure more readers over its paywall.
The plan is to give its reporters bonuses of $10 to $50 based on page views and if casual readers attempting to read a paywalled story are motivated to buy a subscription. Herald Sun reporters could potentially make hundreds of dollars extra a week.
But the rest of us should be concerned about this strategy – particularly that it might succeed.
At a time when readership, circulation and advertising revenues are collapsing, it is important to examine the innovations print media companies are deploying to stay afloat. Their responses to the contraction of print news have implications for the broad distribution of information that is crucial to a healthy modern democracy.
Declining revenue
The Herald Sun plan comes as owner News Corp Australia continues to struggle with declining revenue.
The company’s latest profit figures show revenue down by 7% across its almost-150 Australian news titles. While digital subscriber numbers were up an impressive 20.5%, from 409,000 to 493,200, over 12 months, this did not offset losses from its traditional revenue streams, print subscriptions and advertising.
As with other newspaper organisations, job cuts have become an annual event. Last month News Corp Australia announced another 50 jobs would go, with a particular focus on the Herald Sun and journalists lacking digital skills.
New skills were needed as the company focused on digital publishing, said executive chairman Michael Miller. “We’ll see some skills come into the company and unfortunately some people who have been here a while will be leaving,” said Miller.
What’s driving this?
So this bonus scheme is clearly intended to accelerate the growth in online subscribers, given its strategies so far have not managed to keep up with losses.
Will it succeed and what are the possible consequences?
First, there is a strong possibility it will further promote clickbait and encourage reporters to focus on stories about sex, crime and entertainment at the expense of politics or analysis. A problem with any online economic model based on monetising views is that it incentivises speed and spectacle over restraint and verification.
Second, the strategy is unlikely to boost advertising revenue. Search engine analysts say the value of internet advertising is more complicated than that. More important than sheer numbers is focused, high-quality, high-value traffic.
Third, focusing on traffic and click conversions overlooks an alternative approach to finding a sustainable news model.
Newspapers can look to use technology in a variety of ways to become more viable propositions. In the Herald Sun’s case, News Corp has commissioned a proprietary analytics platform called Verity that will give editors real-time performance updates.
But it could have gone another way. In other parts of the world, news organisations are using technology to pursue an alternative strategy – better connection with their communities.
Investing in conversations
In the US, the New York Times and The Washington Post are collaborating with Mozilla, developer of the open-source Firefox browser, to build tools to increase engagement between news organisations and readers. It is known as the Coral Project, and backed by the philanthropic Knight Foundation, which believes that “informed and engaged communities […] are essential for a healthy democracy”.
Knight has given almost $4 million for the Coral Project to build a new commenting platform, called Talk. Its developers hope Talk can help overcome the behavioural problems prolific on commenting systems. The goal is for comment sections to foster better conversation.
“Talk is a key way for The Washington Post to integrate reader voices with our reporting, and to grow our communities of readers who engage with news,” says the Post’s comments editor, Teddy Amenabar. “Coral’s software was created by newsrooms for newsrooms, so their tools are tailored to our needs.”
Another trend in journalism is hyperlocal journalism – internet-based media focused on the stories and interests of a local community. So far the model for hyperlocal journalism is very small. A lot of it is done by volunteers. But there are cases of viable businesses. At this stage, it is not a big money spinner but it’s early days and there is a lot of experimentation.
As traditional newsrooms lose the resources to practise so-called shoe leather journalism, hyperlocal ventures are “promising alternatives for fostering civic discourse and engagement”, according to media academic Andrea Carson and colleagues. This is despite “a reduced capacity for verified journalism”.
Certainly, these examples of using technology to connect with a community are closer to the way newspapers originated 300 years ago. They brought communities together with news travelling by word of mouth or through letters and circulating in taverns and coffee houses in the form of pamphlets, newsletters and broadsides.
The Herald Sun model to drive traffic moves in the opposite direction.
Leon Gettler is completing a PhD on the future of newspapers at RMIT.
This article first appeared on The Conversation.
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