Time to rethink your Digital Edition
If your digital edition is not delivering a compelling user experience, says eMagazines’ Blake Pollard, you need to think again.
Newspaper design carries challenges that magazine designers rarely face. Daily deadlines, variable content lengths, late-breaking stories, advertising constraints and pagination that can change hours before press time. The best newspaper designers create flexible systems that accommodate this unpredictability while maintaining visual coherence.
Newspaper layout has had to evolve as reader habits have shifted. Time is shorter, eyes travel faster across the page, and breaking news belongs to the phone now, not the front page. Readers pick up a paper now for context, considered reporting and a sense of what matters. Design has to support that shift, presenting content as a visual mosaic rather than grey columns of text.
The way we look needs to keep evolving and our appearance can become outdated very quickly.
Peter Sands Does your newspaper look tired and out-of-date?
Many titles haven't been properly redesigned in decades, even as their readership and competitive landscape have transformed. A newspaper designed for 2005 readers doesn't serve today's readers, yet redesigning a daily title with all its production constraints requires careful planning and editorial buy-in. The regional and local press faces particular pressure, with shrinking pagination and centralised production changing what's possible.
Digital adds another dimension to newspaper design. The newspaper layout that works on a broadsheet doesn't translate to a phone screen. Publishers need design systems that serve print, tablet and web without tripling the production workflow.
Below you'll find some of our best feature articles on the subject, from practical redesign guidance to case studies and expert interviews, alongside our latest news and industry commentary.
If your last redesign was over twenty years ago, then it probably does. Newspaper redesigns used to be a common feature in the industry, but now, all attention is on digital. But, if your print product still matters, then so does its design.
National World has not just redesigned its metro titles, writes Tim Robinson, it has completely rethought the age-old daily format for the modern reader.
Welcome to our latest special feature, this time looking at all aspects of content production and UX. All of the insights and opinions come from leading suppliers to the publishing sector and from senior executives at UK publishing companies.
A picture is worth a thousand words, as the saying goes. Some MailOnline stories have more than a 100 pics. You do the maths! Peter Sands looks at the impact of pictures in news media.
When it comes to image quality, publishers tend to put much more effort into pictures that appear in print than those that appear online. This, says Pixometry's John de Jong, is a mistake and one that can be easily avoided.
The reading experience served up by publishers ranges from the very poor to the exceptionally good, with the difference partly explained by the presence of on-page clutter.
Welcome to our first publishing workflows special, an extended feature taking an in-depth look at all aspects of the content creation process. All of the insights and opinions come from leading suppliers of publishing software & from senior editors.
Hyper local newspaper publisher Gary Cullum is a director of The Newspaper Awards and has been chairman of the event’s judging panels for 28 years. Ahead of the upcoming awards, he answers our questions on newspaper industry trends.
With the rise of digital, few journalists now give much thought to typography, preferring to leave it to the tekkies. This is a shame, writes Peter Sands, because font choices can make all the difference to the success, or otherwise, of your title.
In regional newspapers, publishers are faced with massive structural changes as the internet continues to evolve, coupled with constantly challenged resources. Johnston Press’ Tim Robinson explains how and why editorial design is evolving across the
If your digital edition is not delivering a compelling user experience, says eMagazines’ Blake Pollard, you need to think again.
PressReader’s Ana Cervantes highlights two technologies that are helping publishers improve their digital performance.
The New York Times has chosen Roularta Printing to print its monthly lifestyle supplement, T Magazine - International Edition.
The New York Times last week announced it is introducing a new format to its byline pages.
Copyright, usually the more straightforward and boring side of media law, gets more interesting and complex for publishers in the age of AI, says Dickon Ross.
With rising costs, tighter margins & increased competition, publishers need to ensure their print products deliver exceptional performance. Quality & commitment to net-zero, underpinned by robust business continuity measures, are what's needed.
When it comes to image quality, publishers tend to put much more effort into pictures that appear in print than those that appear online. This, says Pixometry's John de Jong, is a mistake and one that can be easily avoided.
Print is proving much more resilient than many once expected, but publishers and printers need to work together to ensure its long term future.
National World has not just redesigned its metro titles, writes Tim Robinson, it has completely rethought the age-old daily format for the modern reader.
How your magazine is designed says a lot about you and your title. It’s worth doing a professional job. We grab five minutes with Dean Cook of The Magazine Production Company to talk about magazine design.
Denmaur has announced the launch of its new Reel Fast express sheeting service.
National World has announced that they will be partnering with Newsquest for the production of their Scotland and England newsbrands.
James Evelegh picks some of the best quotes from our content production and UX special feature.
Welcome to our latest special feature, this time looking at all aspects of content production and UX. All of the insights and opinions come from leading suppliers to the publishing sector and from senior executives at UK publishing companies.
Welcome to our latest special feature, this time looking at all aspects of content production and UX. All of the insights and opinions come from leading suppliers to the publishing sector and from senior executives at UK publishing companies.