The consumer’s journey toward subscribing begins with engagement.
How did the recent subscribers we studied engage with their newspaper before deciding to pay? The answers point to important and specific tasks for publications to reach future subscribers.
Publishers must optimize content to be found in search engines. They also must have a robust social strategy—for these casual encounters through social platforms lead to subscribers in bigger numbers than publishers may believe. Having a well-designed and constantly updated website is vital—not just for younger subscribers who form the future of a publication’s base. The data also make it abundantly clear that it is important to make a publication accessible to friends and family of current readers, perhaps through family packages.
Almost all of these practices are even more important to reach younger future subscribers. There will be more on this in the section exploring age-related differences among recent subscribers.
People interacted with a newspaper or its journalists in many ways before subscribing. About 1 in 3 respondents report they used the newspaper before subscribing, and among those 1,371 subscribers, the most common uses were regular website visits, followed by finding it in search, noticing friends and family using it, and buying individual copies.
Ways they engaged | Percent |
---|---|
Digital | |
Regularly visited website | 59% |
Found content on Google | 43% |
Used its app | 28% |
Subscribed to an email newsletter | 16% |
Registered for news alerts | 13% |
Friends and family | |
Read print copies of friends/family | 43% |
Saw friends share or recommend it | 30% |
Regularly shared its content | 29% |
Followed news org on social media | 20% |
Followed its journalists on social media | 16% |
Bought individual print copies | 40% |
Used its coupons | 25% |
News content products | |
Went to events it organized | 9% |
Posted comments | 7% |
Listened to its podcasts/audio | 4% |
Data Source: Question: Prior to becoming a paying subscriber to [NAME OF NEWSPAPER], in which of the following ways did you interact with [NAME OF NEWSPAPER]?
Media Insight Project
The data also show that this engagement builds and unfolds over time. News publishers should expect readers to follow a relatively slow, meandering path toward subscribing.
Most new subscribers who used the publication before subscribing, 74 percent, say they were doing so for several months or more, including 49 percent who used it for a year or more before making the decision to pay.
How long they used it before subscribing | Percent |
---|---|
A year or more | 49% |
A few months to a year | 24% |
Two months or less | 26% |
Data Source: Question: How long were you getting news from [NAME OF NEWSPAPER] before you decided to subscribe?
Media Insight Project
And frequency of contact seemed to matter. It was valuable for a publication to be part of someone’s life for free on a regular basis. Of those who used the publication before subscribing, more than a third (36 percent) say they were using the publication either in print or digitally for free at least daily before subscribing. Another third (35 percent) say they used the newspaper a few days a week. On the other hand, just 29 percent say a few days a month or less.
Put another way, 7 out of 10 future subscribers who used the paper before subscribing say they were encountering the paper at least a few days a week before paying for it.
Frequency of use | Percent |
---|---|
Daily or more | 36% |
A few days a week | 35% |
A few times a month or less | 29% |
Data Source: Question: How often were you getting news from [NAME OF NEWSPAPER] before you decided to subscribe?
Media Insight Project
Background factors related to the publication and the consumer are important to getting people ready to subscribe
Beyond the engagement with the source before subscribing, there are a number of ways that future subscribers recognize how the publication is or could be valuable to them.
We call these “background factors”—elements people say led them to interact with the publication and then gradually moved them toward the decision to subscribe.
We asked people about a list of possible “background” reasons they might have had for interacting with the paper. These were derived from results of a previous survey we did in the spring of 2017.
Some of these background factors relate specifically to the consumer, such as their job, whether their friends or family used it, or whether they had recently moved to the area. Other background factors have more to do with factors that the publication can control, such as offering promotions or free trials or high-quality coverage of a specific topic or issue.
We find that these background motivations are a combination of factors related to the consumer and some that relate to the publication.
For instance, 60 percent of these future subscribers identify their desire to have access to news about their local community as a major factor. The second biggest background factor, significant but not cited by a majority, is that they kept noticing interesting or useful articles (40 percent). Third is that they saw promotional pricing or free trials (35 percent).
These are followed in popularity by people’s desire to support local journalism (31 percent), and that they thought the publication was more accurate and reliable than other free news sources (31 percent). Next, more than a quarter cite interest in a specific subject or beat the paper covered (28 percent).
It is interesting that the publication has influence over four of the top six most important factors leading people to consider subscribing. The publication can influence the quality and usefulness of its content, its promotional pricing and messaging, its accuracy, and the area of beat concentration.
Two of these top six factors relate to things about the consumer over which publications may not have much control—how civically minded someone is and their desire to support local journalism. The publication also can have an impact in making sure that people who don’t subscribe might see their best content, by sustaining a robust social media strategy to distribute the best stories.
Motivation for subscribing | Percent |
---|---|
Consumer factors | |
Wanted access to local news | 60% |
Wanted to support local journalism | 31% |
Recently moved to the area | 16% |
Have more time than before | 9% |
Have more money than before | 8% |
Friends or family used it | 7% |
Got it at work or school | 5% |
Publication factors | |
Received discounts / promotions | 35% |
Want accurate news | 31% |
Want coverage of a topic | 28% |
Wanted to get the coupons | 20% |
Both consumer and publication factors | |
Noticed many useful articles | 40% |
Data Source: Question: How important was each of these factors as you considered subscribing to [NAME OF NEWSPAPER]?
Media Insight Project
The Conversion: What gets the credit card out of the wallet?
Even once a publication has news consumers who have engaged with it for months and can recognize several background factors that make them inclined to subscribe—something still has to push them over the edge.
The final decision to subscribe requires a “trigger.”
We asked in two different ways about what finally triggered subscriptions.
In one approach, we asked recent subscribers to recall what triggered their final decision to subscribe from a defined list of 11 different choices.
Discounted subscription pricing comes out as the most important trigger by far, with twice as many people identifying it as any other.
Nearly half of all recent subscribers cited pricing promotions (45 percent). Promotional pricing discounts are cited by more than twice as many people as a trigger—no matter their background motivations—than are any other factor.
Beyond that, about 1 in 5 (21 percent) say they wanted coupons and discounts from ads. Another 16 percent report they were motivated to subscribe after hitting the paywall. The same number say they had just moved to the area, followed by a change in lifestyle.
The chart below offers a sense of these trigger factors, as well as whether these relate to actions the publication can take or whether they are characteristics involving changes in the consumer’s life—though even here a publication can work with employers or real estate companies to identify potential subscribers for outreach as they move in, are hired, or retire.
Percent | |
---|---|
Publication factors | |
Discount / promotional offer | 45% |
Wanted coupons | 21% |
Kept hitting meter limit | 16% |
Wanted extra subscriber benefits | 10% |
Wanted delivery / liked website (VOL) | 3% |
Wanted fewer online ads | 3% |
Found the price appealing (VOL) | 1% |
Consumer factors | |
Recently moved to the area | 16% |
Job/life change | 12% |
Responding to attacks on the press | 8% |
Looking for coverage of a topic (VOL) | 8% |
Saw message about supporting journalism | 6% |
Subscribing is a longtime habit (VOL) | 4% |
Friends persuaded me to subscribe | 4% |
Wanted to support journalism (VOL) | 1% |
Other factors | |
I cannot recall a specific reason | 11% |
I had just read an article I really liked | 6% |
Other | 2% |
“Likes the paper” (VOL) | 1% |
Data Source: Question: While people may be thinking about subscribing to a news source for a while, there can be a specific moment or reason that serves as a tipping point when someone makes the decision to subscribe. Which, if any, of the following triggered your final decision to subscribe to [NAME OF NEWSPAPER]?
Media Insight Project
To get an additional perspective on what motivated subscriptions, we first asked these new subscribers to put in their own words why they decided to subscribe. They could say whatever they wanted, perhaps thinking of background factors or immediate triggers. Most people provided one main reason, but some offered up to three. We then categorized those answers to find common themes.
These answers show that the news content and quality of coverage is top-of-mind for new subscribers. They most often cite wanting local news coverage, with 30 percent of them reporting this without prompting. A desire for a news source that covers a particular topic or issue (12 percent) is also prevalent. In addition, about 1 in 10 say they had a desire for a trustworthy or quality publication (9 percent).
At the same time, convenience and price certainly matter. About 15 percent say the convenience of print and home delivery was important to their decision to subscribe. A similar number (12 percent) say they subscribed because of a promotion or discount on the subscription. In addition, 8 percent say they subscribed to get access to coupons, ads, or other savings.
Fewer respondents cite supporting journalism, a long relationship or fond memories of the publication, liking the news or a number of interesting articles they saw in the publication, and various other reasons. To us, that is interesting. These are new subscribers, and it is clear that there are many ways to reach out to them and persuade them that have nothing to do with a long history with the publication.
Just 3 percent mention a paywall or article limit in this open-ended question.
Percent | |
---|---|
Local news | 30% |
Convenience of print/home delivery | 15% |
Topical focus | 12% |
Promotion/discount | 12% |
Trust/quality | 9% |
Ads/coupons | 8% |
Support journalism | 5% |
Long relationship/fond memories | 4% |
Useful/interesting | 4% |
New resident | 4% |
Habit | 4% |
Convenience of digital/updates | 3% |
Paywall/access | 3% |
Friends and family | 2% |
Other | 1% |
Job | 1% |
Personal change in circumstances | 1% |
Data Source: Question: Describe in your own words why you decided to subscribe to [NAME OF NEWSPAPER]. [Open-ended response]
Media Insight Project
The variety of reasons respondents’ express for subscribing highlights that there are many possible factors that motivate people to pay for news. Different combinations of background factors, triggers, and self-identified motives can emerge. Later in this report, we identify nine groups or paths that an individual subscriber may fall into, each leading to a distinct strategy for publishers to follow.
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- Paths to Subscription: Why recent subscribers chose to pay for news
- What makes people ready to subscribe to local news, and what converts them
- After conversion: How to engage and retain new subscribers
- How different types of recent subscribers vary
- Digital subscribers: What motivates them to pay and how they are different from print readers
- Younger subscribers: What the future of paying for local news looks like
- How subscriber motivations vary in big and small markets
- What drives Republicans or Democrats to subscribe to local news
- Paths to subscription: Nine common journeys from reader to subscriber
- Digital Paywall Converters subscribe because they want unlimited articles
- Topic Hunters subscribe for news about a particular topic or issue
- The Locally Engaged subscribe because they care about the community
- Social Media-Mobile Discoverers subscribe after high-quality engagement on digital platforms
- Journalism Advocates subscribe to support a free press
- Life Changers subscribe because they just moved or changed jobs
- Coupon Clippers subscribe to get print coupons and save money
- Print Fans subscribe because they love relaxing with a paper
- ‘Friends and Family’ subscribers need news to support relationships with people
- Methodology
- Appendix 1: Respondents’ demographics and news behaviors
- Appendix 2: Analytical Definitions of Paths
- Paths to subscription: Nine common journeys from reader to subscriber
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