At a time when every publisher is competing for a finite pool of attention, the Association of Online Publishers’ latest CRUNCH event focused on a simple proposition: loyalty is no longer just a nice-to-have, but the foundation of both reader revenue and higher-value advertising. Speakers from Newsquest, GB News, Gumtree, PlanetSport and The Telegraph argued that the most dependable commercial gains come from audiences who return often, share data willingly and feel some degree of identity or trust in the brand. Newsquest, in particular, has had recent success on that front, saying in August 2025 that its digital audience reached 61 million unique visitors, with 208 million article page views and 135,000 monthly paying subscribers, after crossing 100,000 digital subscribers the year before.

For local publishers such as Newsquest, loyalty is built through relevance, personality and community. Susanne Kinnaird said the company’s strength lies in more than 200 local brands that can each be used to serve distinct audiences and advertiser segments, while also encouraging repeat visits and subscription conversion. She said the publisher’s journalists help anchor those communities, especially in sport, where reporters can become trusted voices in their own right. Elysse Jones of GB News described a similar shift in mindset, saying the broadcaster had moved from a simple register-and-read model to one centred on belonging, with a free community tier designed to lower the barrier to entry and encourage participation through polls, comments and live interaction.

Commercially, those participation signals matter because they convert into first-party and declared data, giving publishers a clearer view of what audiences care about and when they are most receptive. Jones said gamified streaks and loyalty points are now part of GB News’ effort to deepen engagement before monetising it. Nav Dhillon of Gumtree said the marketplace’s challenge is different: rather than content consumption, it maps loyalty to real-life moments such as buying a car, moving home or furnishing a flat, then uses that context to support more seamless advertising. PlanetSport’s George Odysseos, meanwhile, argued that the best defence against commoditised content is authenticity, saying sports audiences respond to writers with clear opinions and emotional investment, not generic output, and that publishers should protect the balance between commercial pressure and editorial value.

The Telegraph’s experience offered perhaps the clearest example of how a loyalty-led model can reshape both subscriptions and advertising. After shifting to a subscriber-first approach in 2019, the publisher rebuilt its ad business around fewer, more deliberate placements that would not damage the reader experience. Gareth Cross said commercial proposals now have to be justified against the risk to subscriptions, while Rachel Cottis outlined how authenticated users and zero-party data have allowed the paper to build audience segments from declared preferences and on-site interactions. Together, the presentations suggested that the strongest publisher businesses are no longer those chasing the largest audiences at any cost, but those turning trust, habit and participation into durable revenue.

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Source: Noah Wire Services