The Challenge
As New Zealand’s most-visited news site, Stuff.co.nz earns the largest share of its revenue from advertising. However, market and macroeconomic conditions can make digital advertising volatile, so Stuff was interested in bolstering its consumer revenue proposition as a companion to advertising revenue.
Historically, Stuff’s content mix has been calibrated to attract at scale - maximising advertising revenue. However, domestic and international references show successful consumer revenue propositions are based on content recipes that foster propensity to pay and support subscriber retention. To enable its newsroom to transition to a content strategy that allows for both scale and subscriber audiences, Stuff sought to design, test, and adopt a ‘user needs’ framework to categorise content and inform commissioning decisions.
Employed by many leading news brands, user needs frameworks categorise each piece of content according to the underlying audience need it serves - e.g. ‘inspire me’, ‘amuse me’, 'educate me’. This allows newsrooms firstly to better analyse their existing content make-up and then to target commissioning and publication decisions toward underserved or valuable user needs.