USA Today to charge for online content
When USA Today was introduced nearly 40 years ago, its short articles, copious charts and detailed weather coverage were disdained by the staid newspaper industry, which nonetheless quickly found itself copying many of the upstart’s novel features.
But on Wednesday, USA Today announced that it was playing catchup with its contemporaries, becoming the final major national daily to require readers to pay to read news online.
In a note to readers published online and in the print edition, two executives at Gannett, the newspaper chain that owns USA Today, laid out their pitch.
“This is a big change; our digital news has always been free,” wrote Maribel Perez Wadsworth, USA Today’s publisher and the director of news across Gannett, and Nicole Carroll, the editor-in-chief of USA Today.
“But USA Today was founded on boldness. Your subscription is an investment in quality journalism that’s worth paying for, journalism that strengthens our communities and our nation.”
USA Today’s shift to a digital subscription model, after the rest of Gannett’s roughly 250 daily newspapers had already made that change, signals the definitive end of an era when newspapers relied primarily on advertisements in their print editions for revenue.
As readers have flocked to smartphones, laptops and tablets, causing print readership and the overall value of advertising to decline, newspapers’ most important revenue stream increasingly consists of charging digital readers.
The announcement could prove just the beginning of USA Today’s transition into a subscription company, Mayur Gupta, Gannett’s chief marketing and strategy officer, said in an interview, pointing to USA Todaybranded destinations for sports betting and games.
It might also make sense in the future for Gannett to offer subscriptions that bundle USA Today and a local newspaper, he said.
“It’s inevitable that at some point we will create a much stronger value proposition from stitching it all together,” said Gupta, a former executive at the streaming giant Spotify.
USA Today’s digital destinations (not all Gannett outlets, as previously reported) routinely receive around 90 million unique visitors per month, the company said.
That puts it on par with rivals with paywalls such as The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal, according to Comscore, a media measurement company.
USA Today has among the highest weekday print circulations in the country. It does not publish print editions on weekends.
“The paywall will extend to USA Today’s entire audience. But it will not cover all articles. Breaking news, particularly of a public service nature, will remain free, Perez Wadsworth and Carroll said.
“The money from the paywall will help fund an already beefed-up investigations unit and visual journalism,’’ they said.
Three subscriptions will be for sale, all with lower monthly prices for the first three months that then graduate to higher ones: a digital-only tier, with an entry price of $4.99 per month rising to $9.99 per month; a digital-only tier without ads, which will start at $7.99 and rise to $12.99; and a home-delivery subscription that will include complete digital access, with a teaser rate of $9.99 rising to $29.25.