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The 6 Reader Cravings Explained

Back in 2016 Mediahuis and KU Leuven ran a study with our team at Twipe to identify what drives an engaging news experience. Around the same time in the UK, BBC developed their first User Needs Model, defining the 6 core reasons why people seek news stories.

The User Needs Model has seen a lot of adoption and movement in the past years which we explain in this article:

At Twipe we developed in 2019 the 6 Readers Cravings Model. This has its origins in the academic research project Digital Reader Engagement and was updated after further research on habit forming news products. It is also at the core of an ongoing research initiative we are working on with Roularta Media Group to define the Edition of the Future.

The 6 reader cravings – Publishers’ recipes for content completeness

What is a rewarding news reading experience? What type of content, bundled in one finite package, would leave readers satisfied, yet craving more?

From the studies on habit formation of Charles Duhigg and Nir Eyal, we know that addressing readers cravings and identifying the variable rewards are critical for building news products that fit in people’s lives and routines.

Twipe’s 6 Reader Cravings Model for Complete News Reading Experience

For building complete and rewarding news experiences we have identified 6 reader cravings that newsrooms have to address with the content they create:

#1 I learned Something New

#2 FOMO – Being prepare to discuss with others

#3 Information that relates to my personal life

#4 Positive, Feel Good News

#5 Humour and Entertainment

#6 Practical Tips or “To Do” Items

Learnings from 4000 articles analysed through the User Needs model perspective

The DRIVE (Digital Revenue Initiative) Project is a consortium of 21 regional publishers in Germany with a goal of growing digital revenues through collaborative data analysis.

To understand readers needs, they analysed 4,000 randomly selected archive stories based on an adapted version of the the User Needs Model.

The DRIVE Adapted User Needs Model

Adapting the model to publishers’ own needs is something we have seen also other publishers do. For example within the emotion driven pillar, The New York Times have added an ‘Enrich my life” need, whilst The Atlantic have added a “let me take a meaningful break” need as explained by Emily Gologoski.

DRIVE used 2 metrics to study the selected stories: Media Time, representing the time a reader spends on the website and Conversion Attribution Score, the likelihood of an article to contribute to a subscription being taken.

Insights extracted from their analysis can help publishers build more complete and engaging reading experiences:

  1. “Update me” is the leading category of stories offered. However, usage data shows that readers do not need this large amount of information.
  2. “Inspire me” and “Help me” articles achieve the highest engagement.
  3. Emotional and inspiring stories, which are popular among readers, are rarely offered.
  4. “Help me” contributes to a high media time, but rarely to digital subscriptions.
  5. Visitors who take out a digital subscription, read “Inspire me”articles above average.
  6. “Housing” is an important topic for regional publishers: For example Solution-oriented stories (“Inspire me”) about a challenging but successful house search or alternative housing projects are particularly popular.
  7. “Give me Perspective” stories contribute to a subscription being taken out.

The User Needs Model 2.0 Overview

In the User Needs 2.0 Model, needs are broken down into 4 different pillars: Fact Driven stories (Know), Context Driven Stories (Understand), Emotion Driven Stories (Feel) and the newly added in this year’s adaptation Action Driven Stories (Do). These type of stories address 8 different user needs

What stands-out is the addition of the Do Pillar with 2 new user needs: Help me and Connect me.

Twipe Explainer of User Needs Model 2.0 by Dmitry Shishkin and SmartOcto

3 steps to Implement the User Needs 2.0 Model 

What about writing content aimed at these needs? Dmitry Shishkin has handily provided specific guidelines on how to write articles which address some of the user needs:

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