Google unfurls subscription tool for publishers

epa06052509 Pedestrian walk past by the Google office in St Pancras in London, Britain, 27 June 2017. The European Commission on 27 June 2017 would fine the Google with 2.4 billion euros for abusing its dominance as a search engine. The company has 90 days to stop its illegal activities or face fines.  EPA/FACUNDO ARRIZABALAGA

Bloomberg

Alphabet Inc.’s Google is developing new tools designed to boost subscriptions for news publishers. It follows a similar olive branch from Facebook Inc. to an industry that has seen the digital behemoths take over the online advertising market.
Google’s latest foray arrives on three fronts. The first is a revamp of its feature, called “first click free,” that allows readers to access articles
from subscription publications through search.
Google is also exploring publishers’ tools around online payments and targeting potential subscribers. It’s all part of Google’s broader effort to keep consumers and content-makers returning to the web, the lifeblood of its ads business.
Initially, Google is testing the tools with New York Times Co. and the Financial Times. But Richard Gingras, Google’s vice president for news, said the search giant is talking to dozens of other outlets as media companies move towards online subscription models.
“It’s clear from news publishers that they can’t live on advertising alone,” he said. “But it’s also clear that we’re seeing a shift in a market.”
Media companies are focussed intently on online subscriptions as print ads shrivel and digital ad spending consolidates with Facebook and Google, which together this year will garner more than 60 percent of the $83 billion market, according to EMarketer. In response, both digital platforms, which have rocky relationships with publishers, are introducing products catered to them.
Facebook said last month it was working to add subscription tools inside its Instant Articles program, which hosts news articles in its mobile app.
Google’s version, called Accelerated Mobile Pages or AMP, enables news websites to load more quickly inside of search.
With the new tools, Google is looking at ways to let publishers identify who may subscribe, determine how much readers would pay and speed up the process.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend