
Condé Nast-owned tech magazine Wired
is planning to put up a metered paywall in January.
Wired editor-in-chief Nicholas Thompson told The Wall Street Journal, which first reported the news, that he expects
a digital subscription to cost less than Spotify Premium, which runs $9.99 a month.
“The simple reason that we’re going to a paywall model is that I think it’s
going to make money, and I’d like us to make more money,” Thompson told WSJ. “The deeper reason we’re going to a paywall model is because you need to hedge against the
future.”
Thompson also said Wired has not yet decided how many articles visitors will be able to read for free each month. He was editor of NewYorker.com when the site
launched a metered paywall in 2014.
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Thompson, who was a Wired editor for five years before joining The New Yorker in 2010, was appointed editor of Wiredin January.
Condé
Nast told WSJ that paywalls may be put up on its other properties next year, as print revenue continues to dip and media companies vie for a piece of the digital advertising pie not consumed by
Google and Facebook.
The editor of Wired also told WSJ that going forward, he will tune the magazine's focus to become less general-interest and more for
"tech obsessives," covering topics like artificial intelligence, genetic engineering and automation more closely.
The idea is that this tailored concentration on technology will appeal to more
readers, and likely advertisers, too.
Also coming in 2018 for Wired? A store at Newark International Airport’s Terminal B. Condé Nast previously announced it
has partnered with airport retail developer Pacific Gateway to sell the latest gear and gadgets.
In April, whispers were going around that
Vanity Fair was planning to introduce a paywall to its digital content by the end of this year.
Business Insider launched a subscription offering this month
called “BI Prime,” which puts select original financial news reporting behind a paywall.