The Numbers Behind the Paywall

Finally! The New York Times is coming out with its paid-for content strategy. A quick summary of the Gray Lady’s paywall plan: a monthly allotment of stories to be read  for free and, above that, a flat fee for full access. Subscribers to the print version (including those who only get the Sunday paper) will have free access. According to the official press release, the new system will be launched in January 2011. For now, that’s all we know.

Why such weird timing? For the biggest online newspaper in the United States, announcing such a move just a week before the likely roll-out of the Apple Tablet is bizarre. OK, we get it, the New York Times won’t join other publishers aboard the Apple bandwagon. As I’m writing this, there are persistent rumors that big players such as Condé Nast, Harper Collins, McGraw Hill, Hachette could sign up — but not Time Inc., according to All Things Digital. Then, either The NYTimes is showing its fierce independence or it is hedging its bets by preparing its own offer, competing with a putative Apple publishing hub. According to New York Magazine, the Times is not joining Journalism Online (see previous Monday Note How to make readers pay for news), nor is it teaming up with the Wall Street Journal in its effort to pressure Google for a better deal. Another question: Why wait so long to deploy the NYT’s paywall? A year to build a digital subscription system sounds quite a long time.

Let’s throw some numbers at the “metered model” – as it is now referred to.

Which part of its audience does the Times actually target? Last November, the Times got 16,5m unique visitors and 2.98 sessions per month, according to Nielsen. As for the number of pages viewed by each visitor, we must rely on a more global figure, again from Nielsen: for the top US newspapers, an average of 43 page views per month (1).

The problem with the Times is we can’t go further down in the analysis because its quarterly financial statements don’t breakdown the economics for the company’s 50 online properties. Then, let’s turn to Washington Post. This newspaper releases numbers for its own web site, numbers we can use to try and model how a metered paywall.

For the full 2008 year, the washingtonpost.com made $122.7m in advertising revenue. Applied to a monthly audience of 11m unique visitors (we’ll assume this stable audience is a yearly average), this translates into $11 per visitor per year. That’s the ARPU (Average Revenue per User) for the Post, it comes only from advertising; and it’s 20 times less than the ARPU for print readers. You see the idea, the goal: having people pay for content is a way to close this 20X gap between ARPUs.

Now, let’s look at the problem from a different angle: who would be willing to pay for the Post’s or the Times’ prestigious content? Not that many. First of all, a large percentage of the audience lands on these sites though search engines and therefore are not likely to consume a lot of pages. Such visitors, about a third of the total audience, must be removed from the pool of readers likely to pay for content.

How much would people pay? According to a Boston Consulting Group survey, readers would agree to pay $3.00 per month on average. Interestingly enough, the BCG found the upper limit to be $6.00 for the “heavy print consumers” category. (The intentional amount is higher in Europe than in the US). As we explained in last week’s Monday Note (See The Death of Joe Average), the notion of mean value doesn’t make much sense here.

Coming back to the Washington Post, using the remaining 66% of total users likely to pay for content (7.34 mUV/month), the expected revenue impact is modeled below (in blue, the revenue boost when compared to the 2008 advertising only numbers):

Some will object: the site’s advertising revenue will be affected by the paywall. True and not true. Yes, the site’s overall audience (as considered in page views) will decrease slightly. But if the paywall only targets the viewership’s top 10%, the loss will be minimal. Second, experience shows ads placed behind a paywall yield much more money than those in the free part. The Wall Street Journal is said to charge 30% more for ads displayed in its pay zone. Advertisers set a higher valuation for this loyal audience.

In conclusion: a carefully set up paywall significantly increases revenue as long as:

  • it doesn’t block access for the general audience (minimum traffic loss)
  • it doesn’t discourage linking from other sites (preservation of the page rank)
  • it targets only the heaviest users, those willing to pay $6.00 rather than $2.00 per month, and those ready to be charged for ad-free content on mobile. Or on a Tablet.

frederic.filloux@mondaynote.com

( 1 ) Strangely enough, Nielsen/Mediametrie in France is showing only 11 pages per French reader of the online NY Times – OK, the language problem might lower the page count. But, for October 2009, (November data are not available down here, Gallic computers are slow, you know), Nielsen grants only 19 pages per person and per month for Le Figaro and a mere 15 pages for Le Monde. These two big sites are comparable by their scope to the NYTimes or to the Washington Post. How come French readers view half as many pages as their American counterparts do – for the same type of sites (if I may ask)? — An update: the cause of the delay to get the French Nielsen data is said to be bug in the US. As for the discrepancy in the page count between US and French, I’m on it.

Be Sociable, Share!

Related columns:

  1. Cracking the Paywall Tweet(This version corrects an error in the percentage for the price increase of the FT) Every newspaper, magazine or website is working on a paywall of sorts and closely monitoring what everyone else is doing. In almost every news company, execs are morosely watching advertising projections and finding numbers that are not exactly encouraging. For [...]...

7 Comments

  1. Posted January 25, 2010 at 4:04 pm | Permalink

    Isn’t it the paywall business model The Economist is trying now after a major failure a few years ago with its first pay per view offer?
    Merci for the article.

  2. Francis
    Posted January 26, 2010 at 1:02 am | Permalink

    The music industry has discovered that people want to pay for what they want, rather than subsidize poor quality content (“duds”) that’s bundled (“albums”) with high quality content (“hits”).

    The publishing industry hasn’t yet come to the same realization, but it’s getting there. News, in the sense of describing events that are happening, has become commoditized and therefore of little monetary value. On the other hand, specialty news content (such as news about a specific industry which isn’t so easy to come by) and high quality content (news analysis, editorials), have value as users are willing to pay for them. So far, most media sites take the same approach to both. But I think they have to divorce the two, with lower quality “commoditized” content that has a broad audience available for free and funded through advertizing; higher quality content available for a fee (with much less, but much more targetted, advertizing paying some of the bills).

    However, I think the “subscribe and get everything” model is doomed to the same failure as “albums”. Rather, media sites like the NYT should employ a one-click unobtrusive micropayments system where you pay per article (ie, a few cents). Thus, you can get exactly what type of content you’re interested in rather than paying a monthly fee for a lot that you don’t want. Obviously, this puts more pressure on the news organization to provide quality content that peolpe will pay for, and they may find that certain types of content that they originally though people would pay for have to be relegated to the free section or dropped altogether.

  3. Posted January 27, 2010 at 4:31 pm | Permalink

    Play Paywall!, the new web game sweeping the newspaper industry
    By Jonathan Stray / Jan. 26 / 10 a.m.

    It’s entirely possible that The New York Times will net a profit from their newly announced paywall, set to debut in a year’s time. But it’s by no means guaranteed. Even (momentarily) setting aside the journalistic or civic-minded concerns about shutting some readers out of the news, the whole idea makes little sense if the basic math doesn’t work out. Making money would seem to be the most basic marker of a paywall’s success.

    Unfortunately, no one knows for sure whether it will. It’s all estimates, assumption, and guesswork — even if it’s relatively well informed, carefully researched guesswork. We just don’t know how readers and advertisers will react.

    But now, with the debut of Paywall!, our revenue game, all that guesswork can be your guesswork. It allows you to explore the situation at the Times or at any other news site.

    http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/01/play-paywall-the-new-web-game-sweeping-the-newspaper-industry/

  4. Posted January 29, 2010 at 1:31 pm | Permalink

    Does paid content (or personalized news) lead to ignorance?
    As newspapers struggle to survive more and more news outlets are banking on what people want to hear about, rather than what they need to hear.
    Here is a good piece of read: http://radar.oreilly.com/2010/01/when-it-comes-to-news-why-wont.html
    Chris Lee thinks that as people get news increasingly tailored to
    their tastes, the overall knowledge of important issues is plummeting.
    ‘I think one of the observations about how consumers are behaving in the
    past 5 years that has surprised me the most is, again, this lack of
    feeling responsible for knowing the news of their country and their local
    government of that day.

  5. Posted July 12, 2010 at 4:05 am | Permalink

    mantapsss…

  6. Posted September 21, 2010 at 9:20 pm | Permalink

    I’m steppingstones. My real name is Shelby, and I come from a humble home in Michigan. This is my first post on hipblogs, and I hope I do this right. I really like the Earth, and realizing new things and getting much too excited over them. I love learning. I lead a vegetarian/vegan lifestyle, and I dance, a lot. I have a fierce addiction to traveling and weddings and ridiculously thorough note-taking in class. I doodle on everything and eat mangoes and ice cream on the roofs of parking garages with my beloved boyfriend. And most of all, I am really, really soft-hearted. So, greetings! It’s nice to meet you.

  7. Posted May 24, 2011 at 8:38 pm | Permalink

    From all the sites I have been to covering this subject matter, I think you do that best at explaining it, so very well done my friend.

4 Trackbacks

  1. [...] it turns out that I’m not alone in trying to figure it out. Frédéric Filloux of Monday Note crunched the numbers and produced a chart that shows that even a 5% subscription rate, priced at $2 [...]

  2. [...] to have a significant pay/subscriber component. Even with the patchy data available, the folks at mondaynote have crunched the numbers on the NYTimes pay proposal. It’s time to crunch my [...]

  3. [...] Among Australian media executives, like everywhere else, the talk of the town is the iPad. I was in Sydney this week, giving a talk at the Media 2010 conference. This gave rise to vibrant discussions of the ways in which the Apple device could transform our industry. Among the group of speakers, the most enthusiastic one about the opportunity was Marc Frons, the chief technology officer of New York Times Digital. (Marc oversees a huge team of 150 tech people in New York). Three weeks before Steve Jobs’ January 27th iPad keynote, Marc dispatched a team of developers to Cupertino to crash code an iPad application. According to Marc, the quality of the interface, the speed of the iPad, its software will make it a game changer for the media industry. From a commercial perspective, The New York Times still hasn’t decided how to deal with its upcoming iPad bizmodel: charging or not, and how much. The context is the Times’ recent announcement of a paywall based on a metered system: a few pages a month for free; then you pay. See our recent story The Numbers behind the Paywall). [...]

  4. [...] Among Australian media executives, like everywhere else, the talk of the town is the iPad. I was in Sydney this week, giving a talk at the Media 2010 conference. This gave rise to vibrant discussions of the ways in which the Apple device could transform our industry. Among the group of speakers, the most enthusiastic one about the opportunity was Marc Frons, the chief technology officer of New York Times Digital. (Marc oversees a huge team of 150 tech people in New York). Three weeks before Steve Jobs%u2019 January 27th iPad keynote, Marc dispatched a team of developers to Cupertino to crash code an iPad application. According to Marc, the quality of the interface, the speed of the iPad, its software will make it a game changer for the media industry. From a commercial perspective, The New York Times still hasn%u2019t decided how to deal with its upcoming iPad bizmodel: charging or not, and how much. The context is the Times%u2019 recent announcement of a paywall based on a metered system: a few pages a month for free; then you pay. See our recent story The Numbers behind the Paywall). [...]

Post a Comment

Your email is never shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*