hnp_01.jpg

Reimagining Hearst Newspapers

 

A Single Platform: Reimagining Hearst Newspapers

 
hero.jpg

Overview

What started as a redesign of the San Francisco Chronicle in 2017 eventually grew into an effort to unite all of the Hearst Newspapers properties onto a single, flexible platform.

This was a huge undertaking. Hearst has newspapers all over the country. No two newsrooms work the same way, no two audiences expect the same experience, and no two websites employ an identical monetization strategy.

Our goal was to create a single platform that could:

  • Improve the reading experience for our users

  • Provide better storytelling tools to our newsrooms

  • Unify page templates without sacrificing brand expression

  • Maintain a profitable publishing business well into the future

San Francisco is one of the markets where Hearst operates more than one property. We were able to unify the San Francisco Chronicle and SFGate with a shared template without sacrificing brand differentiation, which was critical to both businesses.

San Francisco is one of the markets where Hearst operates more than one property. We were able to unify the San Francisco Chronicle and SFGate with a shared template without sacrificing brand differentiation, which was critical to both businesses.

 

Supporting multiple business models

In order to meet the needs of multiple content strategies and business models, we had to approach every element on the page as modular and dynamic: as pieces that can be disassembled and reassembled to satisfy an endless number of conditions.

Some of Hearst’s larger properties are primarily subscription-supported while some are strictly ad-supported, and others fall somewhere in between. So we needed a page model that supported flexibility along two axes: business model (subscription, ad-supported, hybrid), and user status (signed in/out, engagement level, propensity to subscribe).

We’ve begun developing a system that optimizes a page based on both revenue profiles and a propensity to subscribe model.

 
Visualization showing how real estate is allocated according to the two dynamic axes explained above. Purple represents monetization (display, affiliate, or other), while gold represents opportunities for direct messaging (engagement modules, conten…

Visualization showing how real estate is allocated according to the two dynamic axes explained above. Purple represents monetization (display, affiliate, or other), while gold represents opportunities for direct messaging (engagement modules, content marketing, subscription marketing). Depending on the user and the business model, the space on the screen is used differently.

This modularity required a complex technical solution, but we still wanted to keep things as simple as possible for the editors managing the page. We needed to create rules and systems around shared UI elements to solve for all cases, with minimal manual overrides.

A good example is the masthead, for which I designed a flexible system to optimize what’s displayed based on business model, user state, and page type:

 
This diagram explains how the template masthead element is divided into dynamic zones, which are populated according to the business model of the site, the page type, and the status of the user. The notes in the key explain the logic for how how the…

This diagram explains how the template masthead element is divided into dynamic zones, which are populated according to the business model of the site, the page type, and the status of the user. The notes in the key explain the logic for how how these zones are populated according to each of those conditions.


Article page toolkit

The replatforming of Hearst’s sites coincided with a shift in content strategy in many of the larger markets. SFGate paved the way for this transformation with a pivot toward local lifestyle content that resulted in a tremendous lift in engagement.

This was coupled with a pivot toward affiliate marketing to offset declines in traditional display advertising.

To help editors tell these new stories in new ways, and to lend support to an increasingly diverse set of revenue streams, we developed a toolkit of what we called “storytelling utility modules,” which fell into 7 categories:

  1. Explainers - Supporting information (text or graphical) that informs the story but isn’t directly part of the primary narrative.

  2. Commerce - Any opportunities for a user to purchase something

  3. Utilities - Anything that adds functional value to the user experience

  4. Callouts - Real-time alerts and updates about the story and the people or things it mentions.

  5. Direct engagement - Opportunities for readers and editors to engage directly. We want our users to feel like they are part of a community and that their feedback is helpful and appreciated.

  6. Recirculation - How do we encourage a user to continue reading?


Obligatory process photo | To arrive at our toolkit, we isolated a handful of stories that were representative of SFGate’s new content strategy. We brainstormed utilities that would help tell those stories more effectively, tested them with users, f…

Obligatory process photo | To arrive at our toolkit, we isolated a handful of stories that were representative of SFGate’s new content strategy. We brainstormed utilities that would help tell those stories more effectively, tested them with users, found the overlap, and distilled into the toolkit.

A small handful of modules from the toolkit, which has shaped the product roadmap as the template continues to develop.

A small handful of modules from the toolkit, which has shaped the product roadmap as the template continues to develop.


Homepage as content experience

In the past, homepages and section pages were viewed merely as engines to drive readers to article pages. But we thought that to better serve our audience the homepage should be a complete content experience in itself. So we defined a list of “consumption moments,” prioritized them, and let that guide the layout of our homepages.

Prioritized consumption moments, mapped to a page layout

Prioritized consumption moments, mapped to a page layout

This represented a blurring of boundaries between design and content strategy, so this thinking proved useful in conversations with our editorial teams.

Chart showing content examples that might satisfy the needs of three different users within each of the consumption moments defined above.

Chart showing content examples that might satisfy the needs of three different users within each of the consumption moments defined above.

To actually populate these pages we developed a set of story packages, or “collections,” each to solve a different programming need. Some of these were more in service of our lifestyle-leaning sites (which tend to be the non-subscription sites), and some are more in support of our more traditional news sites. But every site has a slightly different audience and a slightly different approach to programming, so all are available to all sites, and automatically inherit brand attributes of whichever site they are placed on.

 
The collections shown above use Hearst’s default styles. In production they all inherit the text styles and other brand attributes of the site they appear on. We are in the process of building out a new design system which will provide for an even g…

The collections shown above use Hearst’s default styles. In production they all inherit the text styles and other brand attributes of the site they appear on. We are in the process of building out a new design system which will provide for an even greater degree of brand expression at the collection level.


Theming

With the core design library in place, we still needed to make sure this shared platform could allow for brand differentiation. The design system itself included three themes, which could be further augmented for each market by way of color, typography, iconography, and photo illustration.

 
sfg.png
sfc.png

Results

We’re still in the process of rolling out this new platform to all of Hearst’s properties, but so far we’re seeing encouraging results. We’ve offered a cleaner experience for readers, a more powerful revenue engine for the business, and a shared platform that doesn’t sacrifice brand expression.

20+ sites have already been migrated to the platform and we’ve seen impressive growth in engagement, retention, and revenue. Over the next year the remaining Hearst Newspapers properties will migrate to this shared framework as it continues to develop. Stay tuned for more!

 

SFGate homepage and article

San Francisco Chronicle homepage and article

Albany Times Union homepage and article

Highlights:

  • Overall: +30% RPM

  • SFGate: +15% engagement

  • Chron.com: +10% revenue

  • MySA: 5x commerce inventory

  • San Francisco Chronicle: +12% time spent