Solid at the back
Well-known member
I also picked up the £1 a month deal a few months back. Won't pay anymore as I barely read it as it is. £1 pm is a fair price I'm happy to pay.
I agree regular robert, but in this example, the Athletic is charging £7 pcm for all sports content, which on the face of it is decent, basically two fancy coffees. However, I personally only read the Brighton articles, so it's probably about £7 per article, which is terrible value. I appreciate some might pore through many more - I'd rather they offered an alternative wallet option and I could pay £0.50 per article or something.
Not sure The Athletic is failing is it? Anyway, it's not a news site, as such.
PS New York Times gained 2m+ digital subscribers last year alone....
I was wondering what alter-ego to give my 2nd account - thanks!
Part of the issue, especially for the smaller/less glamourous clubs (where we fit in that is probably down to what age you are/how you view the club) is that the content is too thinly spread. A wallet option would be a good path for them, but it relies on the content provider being able to lure people in to buying articles, and that means a lot of hitting people up which may get on their nerves and have the opposite effect.
Personally i think its best to just choose a fair price and stick with it, something like £3 per month for all content and then concentrate on making the content compelling so that people stick with it.
I get it that you feel the need to fly the flag for your profession, and I feel your pain, sort of. Truth is nobody in their right mind is going to pay for content, least of all something as trivial as sports content. It's a doomed business model
Paying for what is often football opinion, maybe that model is doomed, but your wider point is completely off the mark. Most large publishing companies (now mostly calling themselves 'content creators') are successfully moving from a reliance on people paying for print to a print/digital hybrid model. In time this may well become a digital only model. They can do this because of the exact opposite of what you say - people are willing to pay for content if the content is good enough.
Well I can tell you with absolute certainty that they do exist. The alternative is to rely solely on people writing what is, quite possibly, unsubstantiated, opinion led drivel on internet message boards. That works for some, indeed many, but not for all.
PAY for Andy Naylor content? Good luck with that
Well that's the issue then, is it not? The content is not good enough, not the model.
The Athletic is a complete triviality. If it were to go bust overnight (which it will do, overnight, sometime soon) then very few would even notice
I think the Athletic is brilliant, but the Albion content is largely wordcount filling PR Naylor writes on behalf of the club, which is a chronic waste of the platform.
£4 a month feels the right price. Wouldn't pay any more. £1 per month is a great deal.
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Agree. Decent platform and some great football stuff on there but Naylor's stuff is pretty tame. He doesn't seem to have any contacts so just regurgutates what the club tell him, which isn't much. He never seems to break stories, only to comment on those of others.
I don’t love football enough to be sucked into yet another direct debit/continuous payment, to read transfer gossip allegedly a fraction second before everyone else passes it on anyway. Who cares? Or “beautifully crafted” pieces from football writers.
We like the Telegraph - football news without the lies, plus great travel and finance sections.
I'm not sure that The Athletic is doomed. I'd guess plenty of people are renewing for less than £59.99.
I managed to renew after 12 months for £30 with a bit of jigery pokery with e-mail addresses.
In my opinion it's one of the best sources for in-depth stories with some excellent writers.
The Athletic may be struggling, it may be succeeding, but it's certainly worth reading.
I reckon I'd be happy to pay about £40 a year.