One of the more active moving targets in Mequoda best practices is the metered paywall.
The biggest question we get is, how much free content is enough? And you have to be careful when you’re a special interest publisher comparing your own paywall model to the New York Times or the Financial Times who have historically given away a lot of free content. Why? Because they publish a lot more content than you. But even the New York Times scaled down from giving away ten articles, and their reasoning was to increase subscriptions.
In March 2020 we saw a number of news organizations open up their paywalls for COVID-19 related content, which we reviewed in Three Current Trends in Membership Marketing Amidst the Pandemic. Although the initial response seemed positive with an increase in subscriptions for some larger publications, we quickly saw more and more of those organizations, especially smaller ones, slowly begin to meter again. Getting people out of the mindset that content is free, is something the industry has been actively working to change for at least two decades, so as honorable as it was, it was time to make a return to paid and valued journalism.
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With a metered paywall, you can fulfill your bottom line while also pleasing readers. Your goal is to establish a sampling mentality. When the guy at the supermarket gives you a sample of cheese on a cracker, he’s not trying to feed you dinner, he’s trying to get you to buy cheese. So your question is how much access you need to give, in order to obtain a subscriber.
Another goal to keep in mind is how much you need to give away in order to get social media engagement. You want to be able to promote all of your articles in social media and through email without a mutiny from email subscribers, fans, and followers who keep hitting a paywall. The Economist has calculated it takes nine weeks to turn a visitor into a subscriber, according to Digiday. In order to keep visitors coming back for nine weeks, they spend a tremendous amount of time on their social media and email presence so that visitors will expend their credits and eventually decide to become paid subscribers.
5 Metered Paywall Best Practices
- Our best practice for most niche publishers is to give away three views per magazine per month. Our publishing partners have found that this is a sweet spot that remedies all of the obstacles above.
- Make clear that the content is premium when they are reading it, with an alert or pop-up on the bottom of the page that tells them it’s premium and gives them the number of remaining premium articles they have access to.
- Design the paywall to be easily read, understood, and acted upon. That means designing in landscape for desktop, and in portrait for mobile.
- Include an email field in the metered paywall floaters, that way you can register their email and sign them up for your newsletter and if they abandon the paid order, you’ll still be able to engage with them.
- For our publishing partners, we create four versions of each paywall floater to let the subscriber know where they are on their journey. The first three have links to login, continue to the article, and a button to subscribe. The only difference is the counter (which says if you have read 0 articles, 1 article, 2 articles). The last one has a message that they have viewed all their articles for the month, includes a link to login, a “not now” link that redirects to the home page, and button to subscribe.
Three good examples of metered paywalls for magazines are Yankee’s NewEngland.com, Ceramic Arts Network, and The Economist.
Yankee’s metered paywall allows three free premium articles per month, and each time you visit an article, you get a floater that asks you to subscribe and also lets you exit to read the article. Once you’ve accessed all of your free articles, it lets you know that your free access has expired.
Ceramic Arts Network is another great example with their Pottery Making Illustrated metered paywall. Again, they offer three free articles per month, which allows their content to be indexed by search engines and pleases their social and email subscribers. They also include a tempting offer of $1.99 per month for unlimited access to all of PMI‘s premium content right in the floater.
Finally, we have The Economist who doesn’t use a floater, but embeds the message onto the article page, asking you to pay to subscribe for unlimited access, or to register (for free) to access five articles per month. They used to allow unregistered users access to a few articles for free each month, but now you must give up your email address to access up to 5 articles.
These best practices are always evolving and we love to learn what’s working for other publishers. If you have a successful metered paywall, I hope you’ll share your secrets of success with us in the comments below.
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2 replies on “5 Metered Paywall Best Practices for Generating More Revenue from Premium Content”
Metered paywalls are so common in digital publishing, but still, some publishers ask the question: does it pay to use a paywall? Magazine apps publisher, PressPad addresses this question in the article where they present several types of metered paywalls, with corresponding case studies https://www.presspadapp.com/blog/paywall-for-wordpress-publishers/
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