Good morning! Today’s newsletter is brought to you by Esther.

Hello to new people who have joined us from the journalism.co.uk article on 40 essential newsletters every journalist should read; there are some excellent recommendations on there from fellow publications and experts.

Just a little note that this will be the last edition of the newsletter until Tuesday 2nd April as we’ll be taking the bank holiday weekend off. Happy Easter!


We’ve already had some brilliant entries in for the second year of our Publisher Newsletter Awards. See the categories and enter (for free) before the 3rd May deadline.

(Book this ad slot)


Scaling the Maturity Model: B2B media’s innovation imperative

Despite nuggets of resilience within B2B media, failure to adopt innovative digital marketing strategies poses a serious risk of being left behind,

 

Imagine a world with zero Google referral traffic. What would you do? It’s a question global advisory firm Collingwood often pose to clients, as fears around search and traffic are front-of-mind for many media executives at the moment.

It’s a tale as old as time; if publishers are over-reliant on a single channel, especially one they don’t control, they’re not resilient. “We see so many publishers missing the opportunity to maximise acquisition and re-engagement of first-party data through email newsletters, lead arbitrage services and other direct channels,” Fergus Gregory says.

Despite how I’ve just sold it, this is an upbeat piece and I’d encourage you to give it a read to see why Gregory is optimistic about B2B media’s ability to adapt and overcome challenges.


 

Wordle and beyond: How games are impacting publisher newsletters

The playful evolution of media: Bridging games, newsletters and engagement Emerging at the crossroads of leisure and information, media companies are

We read (and write) a lot about games and newsletters separately, but not about how one can be incorporated to help the other. This was published at the end of last year but somehow escaped us in the madness of our annual report being published. Still, it’s a fascinating read, and like most of The Audiencers’ excellent editorial, is conveniently evergreen.



 

Widening gulf between weekday and Saturday UK newspaper sales revealed

National newspaper weekday vs Saturday circulation: Mail Saturday edition now sells almost double the number of its Monday to Friday paper.

Today, all seven of the national newspapers with publicly available ABC data are more widely read on a Saturday, some by quite a magnitude. This isn’t at all surprising if you look at how the demand for print – and news – is changing. People are showing a preference for a longer, deeper read at the weekend when pressures on time aren’t quite so acute.


 

Splinter relaunches under Paste Magazine ownership

The politics publisher has been dormant since 2019

Political news publisher Splinter relaunched Tuesday morning, three months after it was acquired by Paste Magazine in a package deal, alongside feminist publisher Jezebel, from G/O Media for an undisclosed sum. The site has been dormant since 2019, and its revival reflects a growing trend in the industry where strong brands are being revived under new owners (sometimes for better, sometimes for worse!)


More from Media Voices

 

War correspondent Jane Ferguson on how tech is evolving conflict reporting

On this week’s episode we hear from Jane Ferguson, an Irish-British journalist covering war, politics and US foreign policy.

 

5 years of pain ahead: publishing needs to go old-school to survive AI threats

“What’s your competitive advantage as a publishing business? It’s not the ability to churn out more articles than anybody else,” says Ian Betteridge.

 

Media Briefs: Democratising AI for publishers

Identifying a use case for AI is usually the biggest roadblock. But the tools also need to be available for publishers to support their revenue streams.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *