How eldiario.es gets people to pay for a free publication


The secret lies in treating users like partners in the journalism project

We’re independent because we’re profitable.” — Ignacio Escolar, director, eldiario.es

The journalism industry has noticed the success of the digital media startup eldiario.es and is trying to duplicate it. That will not be easy.

This independent news publication in Spain has been growing in audience, revenues, and profits while others are seeing huge declines.

  • It is free online, but 56,000 “partners” (socios) are paying at least 60€ (US$ 66) to support its independent journalism. The number of new partners shoots up especially when it publishes an impactful investigation of corruption.
  • Revenues in 2019 reached almost 6.6 million euros (US$ 7.3 million) with profit of 300,000 euros after taxes.
  • It accepts advertising but those revenues do not exceed those provided by the partners.
  • It is among the four most popular digital news outlets in Spain, according to Reuters Institute’s Digital News Report.
  • The staff has grown from eight to 103 in seven years.

Versión en español

The co-founder and director of eldiario.es, Ignacio Escolar, described some success factors in a recent conversation with Rosental Alves, director of the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas and host of the Coloquio Iberoamericano del Periodismo Digital at the University of Texas.

The key: financial and editorial independence

Alves opened the conversation with a promotional video of the publication (at the end of this article) in which Escolar touts the achievements of the previous year.

He made it clear how his publication differentiates itself from its many competitors and made a thinly veiled criticism of the chief of them, El País, without naming it: “We are independent because we are profitable. There are no banks or big businesses on our board of directors, because we, the journalists, are the principal shareholders.” What’s more, eldiario.es has no debt. “We are independent because we are economically sustainable.” El País’s financial problems have caused it to add its rescuers to its board.

Since January, the number of partners at eldiario.es has grown by 60% to 56,000 and more than offset the steep decline in advertising that has affected the entire industry. At the same time, the audience has grown by 77%, driven by an interest in trustworthy information about covid-19, Escolar said.

Transparency aids credibility

Escolar has made it a practice to be transparent about the sources of revenues (in Spanish, but with graphics), the names of shareholders, the salaries of journalists, and how the money is spent, in quarterly newsletters. He is not in favor of accepting any of the government aid that other media are accepting because he fears it might undermine their independence.

Alves asked Escolar about the progressive editorial stance of the publication. It favors human rights, gender and racial equality, and equal justice for all. At times it has been the target of attacks from conservatives who say it is a mouthpiece of the Socialist party and its liberal allies. Escolar responded that they have been critical of the Socialists as well as the conservative Popular Party. According to the Reuters report mentioned earlier, users of the left and center-left trust eldiario.es more than those on the right (Spanish).

Responding directly to users

For Escolar, one key to the publication’s success has been to engage users in dialogue rather than just preaching to them. Some of the publication’s biggest scoops have begun with suggestions and tips from users.

Another basic practice is to respond to every complaint. The staff members who monitor partner relations send Escolar the names of people who cancel their payments because they disagree with the news coverage or opinion columnists for whatever reason.

Escolar writes to them directly and explains the editorial policies. Sometimes he responds to five in a day, sometimes three, sometimes none at all. He believes these chats are worth the trouble. “I’ve learned a lot about the users from this,” he said.

I am personally a big fan of the publication and have been a paying partner for three years.

The promotional video, in Spanish, follows.