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Five things The Independent needs to do to survive online

Five things The Independent needs to do to survive online

Now The Independent has shut down its print operations, TH_NK’s Tom Moran looks at what changes it will need to make as it heads into the digital wilderness.

“The newspaper industry is changing, and that change is being driven by readers. They’re showing us that the future is digital.” – Evgeny Lebedev, owner of The Independent

Over the weekend, The Independent became the UK’s first national newspaper to move from print to being purely digital, ending its 30-year print run.

Unlike the traditional tried and tested world of print media, digital is a constantly changing ecosystem where reading and advertising trends can change or become entirely extinct overnight. To make the transition to online successful, The Independent needs to lay a strong digital foundation so they can adapt to the shifting sands of online behavior and commerce.

1. Don’t forget the design basics

Basic, foundational design principles can often be overlooked in a rush to use the latest design tricks. Immediately worrying about screen sizes, responsive design templates or apps can mistakenly put an emphasis on the device before the reader.

For an article based website, getting the simple fundamentals is paramount. When dealing with long copy, serifed fonts such as Georgia are read faster onscreen and should rarely be smaller than 16 pixels. Line length should be kept around 70 characters to reduce eye strain, while paragraphs need to be short and broken up with bullet points, highlights and lists.

Indy homepage

The Independent homepage is a scattered patchwork of articles, which is a common layout for news websites. Though this helps put more articles on the screen at once, it can be disorientating and confusing to understand. Structured content, lists and filters can all help reduce visual noise and help readers find the information that is of interest to them.

It’s fundamental that The Independent puts the individual customer first to deliver content that is uniquely curated dependent on their tastes, views or routines. A huge matrix of variables need to be considered to deliver news that is relevant and interesting to the individual reader from global to local news.

Instead of mimicking, The Independent needs to pioneer and stand out from the crowd with a website that is bold, original and designed with the reader in mind.

2. Bring stories to life

The ace card of a digital-only news service is the ability to enhance an article with rich media content. Animation, photography, video and infographics are all ways to bring stories to life in a way that is only possible online.

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The award winning New York Times’Snow Fall‘ feature is an excellent example of blending long copy with rich media. In a digital-only world words are simply not enough; readers are looking for articles that come to life before them.

To prove that digital is the future, The Independent needs to demonstrate and pioneer a service that traditional print and aggregate news sites cannot compete with.

3. Advertise without adverts

Year on year banner adverts are earning less and less revenue. Intrusive adverts only serve to distract, annoy or confuse loyal readers and mobile screens often mean many won’t even see them.

Indy advertorial

Too many ads? Currently The Independent’s website is saturated by different ad formats.

Paywalls can work, but for many customers getting access to articles simply isn’t enough. More and more news services are moving from subscriptions to memberships that include access to exclusive offers, discounts, gig tickets or live events.

Recently there have been a few examples where insightful journalism and rich media have been combined with advertising to create something truly powerful. The New York Times’ article in partnership with Netflix Women Inmates: Why the Male Model Doesn’t Work is a great example of advertising and journalism working in harmony.

The Independent has to understand not only what its customers want to read, but how they want to pay for it. If it’s a membership fee then there must be benefits; if paying by article then it must be flexible; and to truly innovate they need to work with advertisers to create original engaging content.

4. Rise of the robo-journalist

With the connective power of social media, news is able to spread faster than ever before. Often, people are alerted to breaking news via mentions on social media and then go to news sites for confirmation and analysis. For online news services, the race to get news live is more important than ever.

The Los Angeles Times was able to post an article on its website about an earthquake within three minutes of it happening, due to a computer program called Quakebot instantly inserting live data from the U.S. Geological Survey into a pre-written template.

The benefit of digital is the ability to continually evolve a story. By investing in Robo-journalism The Independent would be able to post news immediately and then allow the article to become enhanced by their excellent human journalists as the story evolves.

5. Revolutionise reading

The way readers consume information online is changing. From desktop screens to wearables; news sites need to be on the cutting edge of shifting customer behaviours.

More and more digital brands are starting to experiment with Chat-as-Interface. Simple messaging interfaces that look like iChat or WhatsApp but powered by smart AI ‘bots’. Chat-as-Interface will be the most revolutionary thing to happen to the internet since mobile.

By turning services into simple chat messages the user is empowered to pull information to them by ‘talking’ to a digital service like a human. Chat as interface is already starting to make big waves in the travel and e-commerce industries and will have a huge effect on news.

The Quartz news app is already pioneering this trend, allowing customers to ‘chat’ with a news service, able to ask for news or dismiss stories they aren’t interested in.

Moving forward The Independent needs to be able to quickly adapt and develop to these new customer trends by leading the pack. Chat is the perfect place to start a revolution in reading.

Due to the enormous amount of content online there has been a subtle, but fundamental shift in customer behaviour that The Independent needs to be fully aware of.

News sites can no longer wait for readers to come to them, but instead they must go to the reader. The customer is now in control of what content they read, how they read it and where they read.

The editors need to move aside; the reader is now in charge.

Tom Moran is a senior UX designer at TH_NK

Tom Moran, Senior UX Designer, TH_NK, on 01 Apr 2016
“Hey Liz,

Excellent point, I think the issue of content curation is one of the big challenges for digital at the moment and is something that affects not only news but a wide variety of sites from Netflix to Facebook (who have both tried to tackle this with varying levels of success). The same challenge applies to all; "how do you cut down content so a user isn’t overwhelmed with information, but also curate enough that they’re still able to discover new things"?

I think this is something that fundamentally ties back to customer mapping and profiling and truly understanding who the reader is. Content can then be served that is not only relevant but also within a ball-park of interest; so may not be on-the-nose, but close. 3rd party news aggregators are starting to do this quite well, such as Flipboard or Apple News, but I think there’s still work that needs to be done to make it feel truly intuitive. Perhaps the editor doesn’t need to step aside, but maybe scooch over a bit :)”
Liz, Jaques, Newsworks, on 29 Mar 2016
“You make some interesting points here Tom and you obviously know your stuff but there are a couple of points I want to address...

By emphasising the fact that “the reader is now in charge” you give the impression that this is a new thing. People have always had the ability to pick and choose what to read, while newsbrands have always tailored their content according to what their readers favour. This has evidently intensified with the increasing opportunities for digital targeting and personalisation, but the fundamental premise is the same.

You also dismiss editors, but it’s worth bearing in mind that in reality a lot of people like the concept that they are getting a curated, informed and ‘total’ view of the news – The Indy’s Daily Edition app being a perfect example. Readers enjoy coming across stories they wouldn’t have otherwise seen and, in a world where there is an endless stream of information and never enough time, it’s arguable that prioritising key stories is more important than ever.”

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