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Viable, diverse, stable and safe — is this really too much for the media to ask?

Exacerbated challenges: In France, the press face a a global security law, which will make it an offence to share images that identify police officers in operation by face or name. AFP VIABILITY, diversity, stability and safety are essential ingredients of any healthy information ecosystem. How many media worldwide can say yes to all four? How far are individual professionals, news organisations, and the industry as a whole from achieving these? And at this time of global anxiety, economic turmoil, and future uncertainty, is it crazy to be aiming for them in the first place? As we mark World Press Freedom Day tomorrow on May 3, media across the globe are fighting threats both existential and immediate. The Covid-19 health pandemic has exacerbated, and in many instances accelerated challenges familiar to media owners, editors and journalists everywhere. The dilemma for an industry shrinking by the day and fast running out of money is that the biggest, most unavoidable cost is the

Viable, diverse, stable and safe – is this really too much for media to ask?

| April 30, 2021 As we mark 3 May, World Press Freedom Day media across the globe are fighting threats both existential and immediate. The COVID-19 health pandemic has exacerbated, and in many instances accelerated challenges familiar to media owners, editors and journalists everywhere. The dilemma for an industry shrinking by the day and fast running out of money is that the biggest, most unavoidable cost is the journalism that, by its very essence, defines it. Above all, COVID-19 has forced questions around the economic model and how media are financed front and centre for everyone with even just a passing interest in how news is produced. The insecurities that have been corroding the industry for over two decades are now circulating wildly and devastating newsrooms and boardrooms worldwide.

Publisher spend: A bigger focus on the newsroom

Publisher spend: A bigger focus on the newsroom
wan-ifra.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wan-ifra.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

WAN-IFRA report hightlights publishers ad revenue fears

The continuing Covid-19 pandemic, plus fears over a second wave, was cited as the biggest concern by 13% of those taking part in the survey (which was carried out about six months ago, before cases rose over the winter and the vaccine roll out began). The World Press Trends report, published by the World Association of News Publishers (WAN-IFRA), found paid-for digital content was the top investment priority for 2021 – followed closely by reader revenue technology. Asked “what is the single most important change that has to be implemented in their organisations in the coming year?” 44% said accelerating digital transformation strategy – likely focusing on audience-first, reader revenue, data and product development projects.

World Press Trends Outlook: Digital transformation in the driver s seat

World Press Trends Outlook: Digital transformation in the driver s seat
wan-ifra.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wan-ifra.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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