Second, I think this strategy is possibly aimed at reducing Wirecutter’s reliance on Amazon.
New york times wirecutter moves paywall free#
It could even optimize the meter so it doesn’t count toward users visiting via Google searches, thereby ensuring that the site remains free for the vast majority who use it. The Times’s paywall, after all, is metered, and my guess is that most casual Wirecutter readers don’t visit more than once a month - its main utility, remember, only kicks in when you’re looking to make a large purchase.
I don’t have any special insights into the company’s strategy here, but I can think of a few reasons that such an approach would make sense.įirst, there’s a way to design the subscription product so it doesn’t suppress traffic to the site. So why would it seek to decrease the number of readers who are exposed to its affiliate links, especially given that, per Axios, the Times has seen a “surge in affiliate revenue thanks to people looking for new things for their homes during COVID, like office and cleaning supplies”? The company has been so singularly focused on that business model that it doesn’t even allow advertising on the Wirecutter site, lest it be perceived that advertisers can influence the reviews. Indeed, installing a paywall would seemingly undermine Wirecutter’s core business model: embedding affiliate links within their reviews and taking a cut of whatever sales are made when readers click on those links. “Doesn't that defeat the point? Do they want to recreate Consumer Reports?” “The idea of putting it behind a paywall just seems bizarre,” tweeted Industry Dive’s Sean Griffey. The announcement left many scratching their heads.
Axios reported the curious news that Wirecutter, the product review site operated by The New York Times, is hiring for a position focused on paid subscriptions - an indication that Wirecutter might end up behind The New York Times’s paywall, either as part of its main subscription bundle or as a standalone product (similar to its Crosswords and Recipes verticals).