News Needs to Meet Its Audiences Where They Are

Faced with avoidant consumers, media companies must experiment with different technological formats

Ann Grimes
OneZero

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Credit: John Lamb/DigitalVision/Getty

The Reuters Institute released its annual Digital News Report last week, and among its many findings a couple jump out.

One is that when it comes to news, more people are putting their heads in the sand. Almost one third (32%) of the world’s population avoids the news, up 3% from 2017, the report found. In the U.S. that figure is higher at 41%, up from 38% in 2017. As the American Press Institute and Nieman Lab have pointed out, there are a lot of reasons behind this news avoidance problem, but the leading cause for Americans (at 57%) seems to be: “It can have a negative effect on my mood.”

Secondly, the report found that given concerns about misinformation, more people are turning to trusted brands. And more people — especially the younger cohort — are also turning to podcasts for news because they find podcasts “deal with serious issues in an engaging way.” Interestingly, millennials between the ages of 25 and 34 say they are turning to podcasts because they “learn something” (52%) or “to keep updated” (54%). Those numbers are higher for the 45+ crowd (at 54% and 55%, respectively). Podcasts are more diverse and less stuffy, respondents told…

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OneZero
OneZero

Published in OneZero

OneZero is a former publication from Medium about the impact of technology on people and the future. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Ann Grimes
Ann Grimes

Written by Ann Grimes

Ann Grimes is Director of Journalism Fellowships at the Starling Lab for Data Integrity@ Stanford and a Lecturer at the Hasso Plattner School of Design.