International News Media Association and OpenAI announce new partnership exclusive to INMA members
21 May 2025
DALLAS (11 May 2023) – How news publishers can align newsrooms with the rest of the news business to make the vital shift toward a digital culture is the subject of a new report released today by the International News Media Association (INMA).
“Bringing Newsrooms Into the Business of News” explores:
Click here to download the report
The new INMA report looks at the shift to digital consumption and its ripple effect on how newsrooms cover, distribute, and even understand the news.
According to the report, bringing newsrooms into the business of news is vital today because of the shift in content economics behind digital consumption habits. In the newspaper world, that means the shift from an advertiser-driven print bundle to a reader-driven and story-based digital brand.
The report investigates how to accomplish newsroom culture change, defining it in four ways:
Written by INMA editor Paula Felps and INMA CEO Earl J. Wilkinson, the report dives into the need to shift legacy print culture to a digital one that is based on data, readers, and journalism.
The report argues this digital culture allows newsrooms to measure reader interactions with real-time data analytics, allowing them to produce better journalism.
The gap from legacy culture is a big one and how newsrooms are succeeding in bridging that gap is the crux of the report, which is based on INMA Webinars, master classes, conferences, study tours, newsletters, and blogs during the past three years. The report is based on key learnings from INMA’s 18-month-old Newsroom Initiative.
Among the report’s newsroom examples are Aftenposten, The Globe and Mail, The Washington Post, News Corp Australia, Expressen, Dow Jones, The Detroit Free Press, The Wall Street Journal, NTM, Malaysiakini, Berlingske, the Financial Times, Handelsblatt, The Guardian, Svenska Dagbladet, and Dagens Nyheter, among others.
The key thread throughout the report is how crucial the newsroom embrace of data has become. “Data literacy in newsrooms is the common theme throughout this report,” the authors wrote. “The higher the data literacy, the more influence newsrooms will have on the future of news media companies.”
“Bringing Newsrooms Into the Business of News” is available for free to INMA members and may be purchased by non-members.
About the Newsroom Initiative
The new report is based on the research and programming of the INMA Newsroom Initiative which focuses on how newsroom leaders can influence their businesses and create journalism products that serve audiences and meet the promise of reader and advertising models – putting journalism at the heart of publishing.
About INMA
The International News Media Association (INMA) is a global community of market-leading news media companies reinventing how they engage audiences and grow revenue. The INMA community consists of over 20,000 members at 900+ news media companies in 82 countries. INMA is the news media industry’s foremost ideas-sharing network with members connected via conferences, reports, Webinars, virtual meetings, an unparalleled archive of best practices, and strategic initiatives focused on digital subscriptions, smart data, product, advertising, newsrooms, and the emerging relationship between publishers and Big Tech platforms. Click here for more about INMA.