For me, subscriptions wouldn't be great. There aren't many sources where I appreciate a wide enough range of their stuff that I would want the "buffet" model of paying for access to everything they have.
As an example, I really like vice.com's reporting and perspectives on Syria, ISIS, etc. However, I'm not a fan of their reporting on other topics, like gun violence, environmental issues, etc.
I would be much more excited about micropayments where I pay only for what I care about. In the same way that I like "on demand movies" over say, a subscription to HBO.
Pay per use does work reasonably for movies and music. Arguably those aren't really micropayments though. And all you can eat subscriptions for most available content (in the case of music) and some available content (in the case of moviews & TV) is pretty popular as well.
True micropayments would be more like paying a nickel to read an article. All we can say is that this has been talked about for at least 15 years and it hasn't happened. [1] Some sort of subscription that pooled a bunch of sources might work. The ones I've seen around magazines aren't nearly comprehensive enough though.
I assume, if this kind of content got to the point that most of the good stuff was behind a paywall that some sort of review system would spring up.
Hopefully it would be more granular than just at the website level, perhaps being able to drill down to a specific journalist / category / article / whatever.
Maybe that feedback loop would shape things in a way that I would be more willing to subscribe to a entire publication vs cherry picking individual authors or content.
A pay-per-article would be a better fit for me as well.
Blendle [1] has had success with such an approach in the Netherlands where they have brought on board quality publications, letting users pay per article. They also let users ask for refunds if an article is not what it seemed, which punishes clickbait articles.
Micropayments are locally good for you, but might have a global effect of making news providers chase just the things that people will provide the micropayments for, creating another variant on the "Buzzfeed" problem, just with a different focus.
Although, to be honest, I'm not sure how to fix that problem. Trying to create a system that provides news people need instead of news people want is a fundamentally hard problem when those two things don't overlap.
For me the solution is a Netflix like. (Newsflicks?) You subscribe to Newsflicks and can then access all the articles from journalism sites that partner with Newsflicks.
PressReader does this at a much bigger scale than Blendle. It's truly Netflix-for-newspapers-and-magazines. 5,000+ titles, full versions, current day, all-you-can-read model. It's paid for either by personal subscriptions ($30USD/month) or sponsored access is provided by businesses (airlines like Qantas and Virgin Australia, thousands of major hotels around the world, 20,000+ libraries, a partnership with Uber in France for the Cannes Film Festival, etc.) Users can download full titles onto their own device and save them for later reading too.
Full disclosure, I work at PressReader. But it surprises me sometimes when we're not mentioned in these conversations. We do huge business internationally, have millions of active users, have been profitable for years, and are growing at an absolutely insane rate. It's a win-win business model because readers get content (often for free since it's sponsored by a brand they're a customer of), publishers make money (we pay royalties when their content is read), and brands have the opportunity to offer something tangible and personalized to their customers.
Very interesting. I've never heard of PressReader and will check it out.
I guess Blendle is less like Netflix than PressReader, and more like iTunes in that you generally buy individual articles for a small price (often < 1 euro).
I can only read content for 14 days after publication then it can be accessed? I have to pay by the publication in addition to pay by the month? No, this seems like a horrible service for a home consumer. Someone references an article from WaPo or NYT from six months ago and my expensive subscription service can't even reach it?!
You can read up to 90 days of back issues, full-version. If you have a subscription ($30USD/month) it's all-you-can-read unlimited access to everything. If you'd like to purchase a single issue instead of subscribing, you can, but the subscription model gives you full access.
Better yet, visit the PressReader HotSpot Map and you'll see all the places you can get full access to PressReader for free. You just have to access it while you're connected to their WiFi:
http://www.pressreader.com/hotspot/map
First, pay by the article means I can easily go through the annual amount I'm willing to spend on "news" in just a few active months. Then I have nothing left for the rest of the year. I don't want to go through the mental effort based on each article and how it _might_ compare to others in the future in order to decide what to read, regardless of having to make that decision before or after I read the article. In other words, it may be a fine article on in it's own right and fully worth 25 cents. But not compared to all the articles I might read in a year. For example, if I have $150 per year for "subscriptions" that means I get 600 (25 cent) articles per year or 20 per month. Is this article worth it?
Second, as mentioned in numerous blogs, paying by the article creates a race to push more articles with just the minimum quality to get the pay click.
I agree, and that's why the crucial part is the ability to ask for your money back.
Generally I've been happy with the articles I paid for based on its popularity and what publication it was from. But if I recall correctly I asked for my money back once or twice.
The reason I like Blendle is precisely that I've found few magazines or newspapers that are worth their subscription money. It's cheaper for me to pay for that occasional article that is written by a friend or recommended to me.
I believe that ads are killing journalism. The focus is not on creating good content, but mainly create content that will be clickable and sharable. Unfortunately, in our world, there is no direct correlation between good and sharable content.
I'm definitely willing to subscribe to media outlets focused on informing and providing great content to their readers or do some micropayments, basically pay for the content I read and care about.
I like the idea of subscriptions, and I do think they have more of a chance than advertising as far as being a sustainable way to make money for ads goes, but they won't be the future of journalism as a whole.
Why? Because to a certain degree, the majority of standard journalism simply isn't commercially viable. I mean, look at the kind of articles most news sites run. Just plain old news, few if any opinions, only valuable because it's a somewhat quick way of finding out what's going on.
How are subscriptions going to work for that? Why would anyone pay for plain old news when social media sites and aggregators (like Hacker News and Reddit) give you the same information for nothing? If you purely want to know what the latest Apple product is, when a new game will be released, what two celebrities got married or who won the football game, then why pay for an article about it? It's already all over the internet for nothing, thanks to people willing to post about that stuff for free.
This subscription thing only works for fields where news is difficult to report (say, from a war zone) or where the author's opinion/insight itself is valuable (read, not entertainment/gaming journalism). Unfortunately, this makes up a far lower percentage of journalism than some people like to believe.
Edit: while I could remove this comment in 'shame' over posting it before reading the article (written by the cofounder of, uh, The Correspondent), I'll just leave it up...
I agree that low-quality journalism will have difficulty applying the subscription model, but personally I won't mourn their disappearance. I stopped actively reading most main-stream newspapers a long time ago.
The Correspondent, on the other hand, a Dutch online newspaper, is doing pretty well with subscriptions. Their approach (and tagline/motto) is to go 'beyond the whims/delusion of the day' by only publishing a few good articles a day, instead of the deluge of articles, often rewritten Reuters/AP items giving you piecemeal, context-less updates on different issues.
Their approach is about having a number of correspondents, each in charge of a theme that the staff considers important, or that the readers have suggested (https://decorrespondent.nl/correspondenten for a list, google translate should give you an impression of the various themes). Quite often pieces by guest writers are published too, but usually still under one of these themes.
Quite often they'll publish a series of articles, diving into one topic, or write an article as a response to reader feedback (one example being the Operation Easy Chair, which they also published in English and as an eBook: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10789987).
So far they seem to be doing pretty well, which is amazing considering that it's (almost) entirely in Dutch, and entirely reader-supported. I think they're working on an English version as well.
One could argue that it only works because their audience mostly consists of educated readers with a decent income, but I'd argue that 'non-educated' readers would often be better of with little to no news instead of the crap they're presented with through the low-quality papers. And if demand for such news is large enough, people will end up willing to pay for it when it's gone. Finally, there's acceptable news coverage provided on public broadcast as well.
This will suck for many journalists, but I wouldn't be surprised if the decent ones will be happy with whatever alternatives pop up. Most decent journalists I know are miserable at the papers they work for, for various reasons. The Wire's last season, while perhaps a bit too slanted against mainstream newspapers, does a pretty decent job outlining many of the problems.
One problem with subscriptions is privacy. One could argue that currently it is difficult with all the ad tracking but its possible. With subscriptions, state agencies will have an easier time knowing your preferences just by following the money.
You can always use a VPN, register with a dummy email account, and pay with a prepaid credit card if you're concerned about such things. Alternatively, subscribe to everything so your preferences disappear.
21 comments
[ 2.0 ms ] story [ 56.0 ms ] threadAs an example, I really like vice.com's reporting and perspectives on Syria, ISIS, etc. However, I'm not a fan of their reporting on other topics, like gun violence, environmental issues, etc.
I would be much more excited about micropayments where I pay only for what I care about. In the same way that I like "on demand movies" over say, a subscription to HBO.
True micropayments would be more like paying a nickel to read an article. All we can say is that this has been talked about for at least 15 years and it hasn't happened. [1] Some sort of subscription that pooled a bunch of sources might work. The ones I've seen around magazines aren't nearly comprehensive enough though.
[1] http://www.openp2p.com/lpt/a//p2p/2000/12/19/micropayments.h...
Hopefully it would be more granular than just at the website level, perhaps being able to drill down to a specific journalist / category / article / whatever.
Maybe that feedback loop would shape things in a way that I would be more willing to subscribe to a entire publication vs cherry picking individual authors or content.
Blendle [1] has had success with such an approach in the Netherlands where they have brought on board quality publications, letting users pay per article. They also let users ask for refunds if an article is not what it seemed, which punishes clickbait articles.
[1]: https://launch.blendle.com
Although, to be honest, I'm not sure how to fix that problem. Trying to create a system that provides news people need instead of news people want is a fundamentally hard problem when those two things don't overlap.
Full disclosure, I work at PressReader. But it surprises me sometimes when we're not mentioned in these conversations. We do huge business internationally, have millions of active users, have been profitable for years, and are growing at an absolutely insane rate. It's a win-win business model because readers get content (often for free since it's sponsored by a brand they're a customer of), publishers make money (we pay royalties when their content is read), and brands have the opportunity to offer something tangible and personalized to their customers.
I guess Blendle is less like Netflix than PressReader, and more like iTunes in that you generally buy individual articles for a small price (often < 1 euro).
Better yet, visit the PressReader HotSpot Map and you'll see all the places you can get full access to PressReader for free. You just have to access it while you're connected to their WiFi: http://www.pressreader.com/hotspot/map
First, pay by the article means I can easily go through the annual amount I'm willing to spend on "news" in just a few active months. Then I have nothing left for the rest of the year. I don't want to go through the mental effort based on each article and how it _might_ compare to others in the future in order to decide what to read, regardless of having to make that decision before or after I read the article. In other words, it may be a fine article on in it's own right and fully worth 25 cents. But not compared to all the articles I might read in a year. For example, if I have $150 per year for "subscriptions" that means I get 600 (25 cent) articles per year or 20 per month. Is this article worth it?
Second, as mentioned in numerous blogs, paying by the article creates a race to push more articles with just the minimum quality to get the pay click.
Generally I've been happy with the articles I paid for based on its popularity and what publication it was from. But if I recall correctly I asked for my money back once or twice.
The reason I like Blendle is precisely that I've found few magazines or newspapers that are worth their subscription money. It's cheaper for me to pay for that occasional article that is written by a friend or recommended to me.
Why? Because to a certain degree, the majority of standard journalism simply isn't commercially viable. I mean, look at the kind of articles most news sites run. Just plain old news, few if any opinions, only valuable because it's a somewhat quick way of finding out what's going on.
How are subscriptions going to work for that? Why would anyone pay for plain old news when social media sites and aggregators (like Hacker News and Reddit) give you the same information for nothing? If you purely want to know what the latest Apple product is, when a new game will be released, what two celebrities got married or who won the football game, then why pay for an article about it? It's already all over the internet for nothing, thanks to people willing to post about that stuff for free.
This subscription thing only works for fields where news is difficult to report (say, from a war zone) or where the author's opinion/insight itself is valuable (read, not entertainment/gaming journalism). Unfortunately, this makes up a far lower percentage of journalism than some people like to believe.
I agree that low-quality journalism will have difficulty applying the subscription model, but personally I won't mourn their disappearance. I stopped actively reading most main-stream newspapers a long time ago.
The Correspondent, on the other hand, a Dutch online newspaper, is doing pretty well with subscriptions. Their approach (and tagline/motto) is to go 'beyond the whims/delusion of the day' by only publishing a few good articles a day, instead of the deluge of articles, often rewritten Reuters/AP items giving you piecemeal, context-less updates on different issues.
Their approach is about having a number of correspondents, each in charge of a theme that the staff considers important, or that the readers have suggested (https://decorrespondent.nl/correspondenten for a list, google translate should give you an impression of the various themes). Quite often pieces by guest writers are published too, but usually still under one of these themes.
Quite often they'll publish a series of articles, diving into one topic, or write an article as a response to reader feedback (one example being the Operation Easy Chair, which they also published in English and as an eBook: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10789987).
So far they seem to be doing pretty well, which is amazing considering that it's (almost) entirely in Dutch, and entirely reader-supported. I think they're working on an English version as well.
One could argue that it only works because their audience mostly consists of educated readers with a decent income, but I'd argue that 'non-educated' readers would often be better of with little to no news instead of the crap they're presented with through the low-quality papers. And if demand for such news is large enough, people will end up willing to pay for it when it's gone. Finally, there's acceptable news coverage provided on public broadcast as well.
This will suck for many journalists, but I wouldn't be surprised if the decent ones will be happy with whatever alternatives pop up. Most decent journalists I know are miserable at the papers they work for, for various reasons. The Wire's last season, while perhaps a bit too slanted against mainstream newspapers, does a pretty decent job outlining many of the problems.