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Why the FT chose to deliver its new MBA course via newsletter

Why the FT chose to deliver its MBA course via newsletter – DCN

A look at how and why the Financial Times is leveraging newsletters as a way to offer educational content to inform and engage audiences.

 

When Sarah Ebner, the FT’s Head of Newsletters spoke to us on the podcast last month, she mentioned that they’d just launched their first course delivered via email. Here, I spoke to the project’s lead, Emily Goldberg, the FT’s US Newsletter Editor, about why they chose a newsletter course, balancing information delivery, and why evergreen content is growing increasingly important to newsletter publishers.

The point I found particularly interesting here is the target audience for the course. The FT has one of the hardest paywalls in the industry, so offering a free newsletter series doesn’t seem like an obvious fit. But Goldberg explained that because it is aligned with their existing successful MBA rankings programme, they are attracting younger sign-ups who they can then work on converting to an FT student subscription.

It’s a clever place to start. Also, because the series starts whenever someone signs up, it can run for years with only the initial costs of putting it together. There’s some inspiration to take you into the weekend.


Are BuzzFeed’s AI-generated travel articles bad in a scary new way — or a familiar old way?

Are BuzzFeed’s AI-generated travel articles bad in a scary new way — or a familiar old way?

I was Buzzy once.

 

It looks like BuzzFeed’s plans to use AI to generate articles are well under way. Futurism reported yesterday that alongside the quizzes, there are now over 40 SEO-driven travel guides bylined ‘As Told to Buzzy’. The articles are pretty bad, but as Laura Hazard Owen points out, they actually look a lot like the SEO-driven, human-written meh content that you’ll find all over the rest of the internet. Whoop whoop.


How Dotdash Meredith worked through the challenge of integrating two major publishers’ tech stacks

How Dotdash Meredith worked through the challenge of integrating two major publishers’ tech stacks

At the Digiday Publishing Summit, Dotdash Meredith product chief Adam McClean shared why he had initially expected the integration to be done by summer 2022 and why the work is …

 

This is a fascinating look behind the scenes of the Dotdash Meredith merger. We don’t often think about the logistics of combining two publishing houses of this scale and complexity. In the year following the merger, the team have moved over a million pieces of content, migrated or killed 1-200,000 pieces, and retrained hundreds of editors on new CMS systems.


Local newspapers have lost the plot

Local newspapers have lost the plot

…and what they can learn from the recent turnaround from Barnes & Noble.

 

If you take AI-related articles out of the equation, there has been an awful lot of industry chatter about local media over the past few weeks. Our own thoughts were sparked by some unfortunate comments from UK execs, but we don’t often get to hear much from those overseas. Simon Owens has done a neat round-up of the issues over the pond, and who is seeing success. Interestingly, not anyone with a print portfolio…


More from Media Voices

Listen again: The start-ups saving local news in the U.S.

The start-ups saving local news in the U.S. – Media Voices

The narrative that local news is dead is widely accepted in the media industry. The rise of digital advertising has …

 

Simon’s piece reflects what we found last year when we spoke to a number of local news start-ups. The path to sustainability isn’t straightforward, but there are some organisations making it work with lean operations, and a hyper-focus on their local areas.

How TIME thrives on its century-old reputation

100 years after the first TIME magazine was published in New York City, the publication has undergone a number of transformations.

 

To counter AI-generated disinformation, we need internet culture correspondents

Tech journalists can tell us how AI generates disinformation. We need specialist internet culture reporters to tell us why.

 

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Become a supporter of The Media Voices Team today! ❤️ Ko-fi lets you support the creators you love with no fees on donations.

 

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