Johnston Press CEO Ashley Highfield says the news business shouldn’t panic, as he aims to make a quarter of its revenue from digital, turn its 300-plus UK local newspapers “digital-first” and steadfastly keep its websites and mobile apps free, whilst introducing paid iPad editions.
No burning platform
Highfield, who raised eyebrows by moving to a troubled local print specialist for a large salary after high-profile digital stints, has, since his appointment in 2011, concluded it’s not all doom and gloom for the industry…
Free mobile as traffic-giver
Make it sing with ads
Back in 2010, Johnston Press trialled payment requirements on a small number of websites but chose not to execute.
Staying in the social loop
Highfield said the blank payment structure implemented by News International’s The Times is not the way to go…
“The danger of putting your content behind the paywall, as News International did, is you don’t get indexed and you fall off the social graph and no-one’s interested in the discussion – it’s a dangerous place to end up,” he said.
“That’s not what the bread and butter of regional media is. We’re about engaging with the community. We have to be free in order to do that. It’s not a model we’re about to follow any time soon.”