Turning The Mirror on the Next Generation

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Photo: Pexels

We have cleaned up, converted, mucked out, and today we are presenting the new digital Spiegel.

This is how Der Spiegel, a center-left weekly magazine published in the German city of Hamburg, touted last January its newly redesigned digital platform.

Three Years for a Fresh Start

NextGen addressed the newspaper’s need to rejuvenate its decades-old online infrastructure. Its previous online layout dated from the mid-1990s. For 25 years, all that Spiegel did on its website was to inject some color here and there.

How can the layout support both was one of the questions the team tried to address before the launch,

Elmer said.

Subscribing to the Future

Der Spiegel (meaning “mirror” in German) is one of Germany’s oldest publications, its history harking back to 1947 when John Seymour Chaloner, a British journalist, and Rudolf Augstein, a German radio operator, established the magazine. Since then, it has grown into a journalism powerhouse, famed for uncovering political scandals and investigating government malpractice.

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Time to Monetize

Advertising is still the main source of Spiegel’s financing, but the outlet hopes that its redesigned platform will financially sustain itself through paid subscriptions.

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“the first step into personalization,”

Matthias Seitz, head of the Spiegel’s editorial team for research and development, tweeted last January.

Journalism That Improves Lives and Societies

Subscription funding is undeniably crucial for Spiegel. But the main driver behind the magazine’s recent modernization is journalism. Spiegel’s new platform was designed first and foremost as an advanced form of production and consumption of journalism where people will gradually learn that paying to get informed can help improve their lives and the society they live in.

The CMDS Blog

Stories published by the team of the Center for Media, Data…

Center for Media, Data and Society

Written by

Research center for the study of media, communication, and information policy and its impact on society and practice. https://cmds.ceu.edu/

The CMDS Blog

Stories published by the team of the Center for Media, Data and Society at the CEU School of Public Policy.

Center for Media, Data and Society

Written by

Research center for the study of media, communication, and information policy and its impact on society and practice. https://cmds.ceu.edu/

The CMDS Blog

Stories published by the team of the Center for Media, Data and Society at the CEU School of Public Policy.

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