How publishers can leverage first-party data to drive revenue
What is first-party data?
- Personal data such as name, age and location
- Analytics data, including visited URLs and browser/device used
- Specific on-site actions and behaviour
- Payment and purchase history.
How to collect first-party data
- Create incentives – get visitors interested in sharing data via access to premium content, offers and discounts.
- Frictionless sign-up experiences – publishers who allow subscribers to sign up using existing social accounts make joining more attractive. The easier the process, the better.
- Interest-based newsletters – multiple newsletters tailored to specific interests and needs collect more emails and enable publishers to package and put premiums on segments.
- Interactive content – quizzes and challenges can create opportunities for interaction with subscribers.
- Selective content locking – use Google Analytics to find out which pages have the most views on your site and the highest time-on-page average.
- Progressive profiling – it’s very important to establish trust with users and not overwhelm them. Gather data over time, across multiple touchpoints.
How can publishers harness first-party data?
Use personalized experiences to improve engagement
Personalized user experiences are increasing in popularity. They tailor subscription journeys and experiences to the preferences of each unique customer. It’s a win-win situation, as the more relevant the content is, the stronger the data you can gather from them.
For example, The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) allows users to create profiles based on their news interests. By doing so, they share targeted recommendations and point readers towards relevant content. Users receive a personalized homepage with a curated news feed, too.
To dive deep into this topic, check out the article “How to personalize subscription journeys for revenue growth”.
Tailor subscription offers to different paying audiences
The WSJ and another publishing giant, the New York Times, no longer use one-size-fits-all paywalls. They both opt for dynamic versions, recognizing that flexibility is an important way to convert audiences that wouldn’t normally pay for content.
So, if your readers are continuously viewing articles in a specific category, you can improve conversions by aligning paywall messaging. You can also use other data to estimate the chances of users paying for content and whether you should adjust your paywalls.
For example, users referred from emails are more likely to convert than those referred from Facebook. A newsletter sign-up is likely a better use of resources than trying to push Facebook visitors to register.
Deliver hyper-targeted audience segments
Grow newsletter subscriptions
Improve lifecycle marketing
Publishers should consider deploying personalized onsite CTAs or re-engagement emails that correspond with a subscriber’s place in the lifecycle. For example, if the option to renew a subscription is imminent, tailor these to touch on that.
First-party data enables you to identify if users are actively consuming content from multiple categories, or are only interested in one. Either way, you can tailor renewal appeals to encourage consumption across categories. Or, remind a subscriber of the ‘one thing’ they’d really miss out on, should they choose not to renew.