Only eight seats remain

for the Digiday Programmatic Marketing Summit, May 6-8 in Palm Springs.

SECURE YOUR SEAT

Axios is holding off on its high-end subscription product, for now

Politics and business publisher Axios is putting the brakes on its high-end subscription product for the time being.

On Monday, at the Digiday Publishing Summit in Key Biscayne, Florida, Axios president and co-founder Roy Schwartz said that the company is putting its premium subscription product on hold while it builds out its brand. The high-end subscription product raised a lot of eyebrows within the media industry back in December 2016, when Axios CEO Jim VandeHei announced that Axios would launch a $10,000 a year subscription product.

“For the moment, we want to focus our resources on building our brand because we have seen that once people start using Axios, they will love it and come back,” Schwartz said. “We will launch our paid subscription model when we feel the timing makes sense.”

Schwartz declined to say when the subscription product might come out or what information the product would include. Part of the challenge for the publisher is figuring out how to provide information that is unique and valuable enough that business professionals will get their companies to pay five figures for it. So for the time being, Axios is focusing on marketing to build up its name recognition before it asks companies to cough up money for its subscription service.

Part of the publisher’s brand marketing involves encouraging its star reporters like Jonathan Swan to appear on cable TV news outlets whenever possible.

“We encourage [reporters] to be a brand, but to do it under Axios,” Schwartz said.

With Axios pushing pause on its subscription service, it is worth recognizing that pricey subscription products require a special sales approach, which is a lot to undertake for a publisher that launched just over eight months ago. Publishers like National Journal and Politico only broke through with their high-end subscription services after they extended their selling process to include multiple meetings and conversations over a period as long as six months, which is an expensive method to selling a media product.

In the past two months, Axios grew from 77 employees to 85 employees. It now has 40 people in its newsroom, Schwartz said. During that same time period, the publisher also grew its video team from three people to nine.

Axios videos run from 90 seconds to two minutes. Producing video is a big upfront investment for publishers, but for Axios its videos are already making money since many of them are underwritten by brands like JPMorgan Chase, Schwartz said.

Although Axios doesn’t have plans to release its subscription product in the immediate future, it still plans to eschew traditional banner ads in favor of custom native ads that mimic its short articles.

“I am not a believer in programmatic,” Schwartz said. “I have seen a lot of things strip power from a publisher. The moment you let go of your direct sales channel data, you can end up in trouble.”

 

More in Media

Vibes over metrics: Why more creators are holding IRL events to own their audience

IRL events are becoming increasingly important pillars of a content creator’s growth strategy; here’s why.

How The Financial Times is betting on personality-led vodcasts as its next subscription lever

By pairing star journalists with a subject‑specific standalone YouTube channel, The Financial Times hopes to deepen parasocial relationships off‑platform and cultivate future subscribers.

From page views to propensity: How the Daily Mail is retooling for a zero-click world

The pressure of zero-click underpins a wider product overhaul: games upgraded from sideshow to front door, new hubs like Crime Desk designed to keep niche communities coming back, an AI-powered dynamic paywall tuned to user behavior; a bigger bet on personalization and the app as a primary destination.