Effects of Content Sourcing Strategy on Online News Subscription

2020 
Declining circulation and advertising revenue have led many newspapers to shrink their in-house staff and rely more on content sourced from external wire agencies. In this study, we analyze how the mix of in-house and wired content impacts online readers’ subscription decisions using clickstream data from a large regional U.S. newspaper. To control for sample selection that may occur if readers visit the site on days with their preferred content, we use local precipitation as an excluded variable that indirectly randomizes their exposure to content from these two sources. We find that publishing 10 additional in-house articles a day would increase a reader’s rate of subscription by 15% relative to the baseline subscription rate. Publishing 10 additional wired articles a day, on the other hand, would decrease the subscription rate by 11%. Effects of content in some categories within each source go against the overall trend. Producing more General News, Sports, and Entertainment articles, and wiring more Business articles increase subscription. In contrast, publishing more Lifestyle, Health, and Food articles do not encourage subscriptions, regardless of their sources. These results suggest that there exist opportunities for newspapers to increase subscriptions by carefully publishing the right content from the right source.
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