The paywall debate
This is a cross post from Mary Hamilton.co.uk. Amongst other things, Mary is a senior reporter at Archant. You can follow her on Twitter here and read the original post on her blog here.
An interesting post extolling the virtues of the paywall by Julien Rath as part of journalism.co.uk’s excellent TNTJ group blog has really gotten me thinking. Not because I agree – far from it – but it’s finally forced me to put into words my own views on the massive paywall debate.
I don’t like them. I don’t think that most papers have ever been bought on the basis of the news content - or even the op-ed and columns. (Sometimes the columns – Bridget Jones springs to mind – but rarely, and certainly not enough to subsidise an entire paper.) Asking people to pay on the web for things they don’t necessarily value enough to pay for in print – this seems pointless to me.
There’s a laundry list of ideological complaints about paywalls. They trap journalism behind a wall, cutting off access to information in a terribly anti-open-web sort of way. They create gated communities where dissent is unlikely and where the turbulent streams of the open web can’t intrude – for better or worse. They ensure a sort of private members’ club that cuts off those who can’t or don’t want to pay, which can be a blessing or a curse depending on your point of view.
Ideology aside, my most basic reason for disliking paywalls is business based. We have declining circulation in print, which means very few new paper readers will come to our websites based on what we’ve put in our newspapers. One of the obvious ways to gather new readers therefore is online, getting young people used to seeing our content linked on Facebook, Twitter, social networks they belong to and appreciate, in the hope that we can drive brand loyalty through those platforms and maybe, eventually, a few of those people will start reading the paper.
What happens to that model if there’s no accessible content online? It dies. What’s the plan to attract new readers to your brand above all others if it’s all behind a paywall? I haven’t yet seen one that works. It doesn’t matter how well-written or wonderful your editorials are – if no one can link to them they aren’t going to drive new traffic to your site.
Breaking news content online will rarely if ever be unique outside exceptionally specialist circles. Commentary, analysis, feature articles are more “valuable”, but very rarely irreplaceable given the vast amount of alternative and specialist content available for free elsewhere. And many news consumers now read what their social circle reads and links. We come through that to like personalities or subject-specific content, but that’s not the same as a brand loyalty – I readCharlie Brooker and the Guardian Datablog regularly, but that doesn’t mean I ever read the Guardian homepage. Paying for the whole Times website when I just want Caitlin Moran doesn’t make a lot of sense to me – especially when I can’t search for Times content using my normal methods (Google) and no one else links me to it because it’s all behind a wall, so I’d have to go hunting for it specifically if I wanted to include it in my daily reading. If many other net users are like me then they won’t be willing to pay for a whole bundle when what they want is one strand.
I’m more open to the idea of limited paywalls on sites like the proposed New York Times one, where only very regular readers – the folks who are already brand loyal – get charged for content. I still think they do more harm than good, because at that point you’re essentially punishing people for liking you too much. If the expectation is that content is free, suddenly charging is going to irritate people and drive them away from engaging too strongly.
Yes, journalists need to be paid for what we do. We need to eat and live, after all. I’m interested in the idea of micropayment systems that let me pay pennies at a time for content from any one of hundreds of news sources – from specialist science papers via Athens through the Financial Times through the Sun, I suppose, pretty soon. I’m interested in untapped affiliation potential – ticket sales, restaurant bookings, holidays, iTunes links next to band reviews. We can still make money from picture sales, family notices and so on, but we can do it in new ways – like the death notices my paper has set up where a single payment gets you not just the notice in the paper but also a living page that remains as a permanent and changing tribute. And that’s before we get into serious targetted advertising solutions, or the content changes that have got the Mail Online to where it is today.
I’m not Rupert Murdoch. I haven’t sat in front of the figures or done the maths with real audience numbers, so like most other people I’m just having a good old reckon. Still, I reckon there are better ways forward than paywalls. What do you think?

September 7th, 2010 at 1:36 pm
[...] paywall debate continues over at Tomorrow’s News, Tomorrow’s Journalists (TNTJ) – a subsidiary of [...]
September 8th, 2010 at 8:30 am
Actually this entire thing is not worth talking about…since I’m fixated on the worthless by nature here goes nothing. TLDR: Economics will sort out the issue in time…
It’s rather like debating the price of cocoa and its derived products. Assuming you aren’t of the left-wing persuasion of limiting pricing it’s rather a meaningless debate since many factors – supply and demand, businesses colluding, stockpiles, quality of year’s harvest – determines the precise popularity and consumption of cocoa.
It might be the price is stable or lowered if a business believes the profit maximization is found at a cheaper price: The ‘pile em’ high, sell em’ cheap’ phenomena. This, in theory, happens though exceptions abound for diverse reasons…in this case a dinosaur named Murdoch’s obstinancy.
With news the product offered varies in other factors than an out-and-out good: Staff working on the news, the quality of the story ‘harvest’ and the biggest factor; supply and demand. If you can get news elsewhere for free (save for time spent having your eyes whored to by advertisments) why not receive it away from The Times paywall or whatever.
It’s not hard. Any ethics, morals, abstract thought or theorizing on the issue is completely irrelevant since the economic reality holds all the cards while we’re interested observers watching the grand, disasterous poker game of old media’s decline similar to a rather drawn-out, pigheaded vaudeville.
Pete, editor at Dirty Garnet.
September 8th, 2010 at 8:07 pm
[...] Paywalldebatte hat Mary Hamilton einen längeren Artikel aus Journalistensicht verfasst. Der Schlussfolgerung, mehr auf Micropayment-Lösungen zu setzen, [...]
September 30th, 2010 at 2:38 pm
[...] From Mary Hamilton’s post: What’s the plan to attract new readers to your brand above all others if it’s all behind a paywall? I haven’t yet seen one that works. It doesn’t matter how well-written or wonderful your editorials are – if no one can link to them they aren’t going to drive new traffic to your site. [...]
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