Adapting to the public
Posted: Thu Feb 13, 2025 10:49 am
During the crisis, Heidi.news has made articles deemed important for public debate available free of charge. Image: Heidi.news
The Heidi.news website offers its subscribers the possibility to ask a question to the editorial staff via its website. This feature has become "a driving force" during the lockdown.
One of the cornerstones of journalism is listening overseas chinese in worldwide data to the reader. If you don't have direct input from the reader, you can try to put yourself in their shoes. There's no better way to do this than to let them choose the topics you're going to cover in this kind of period.
According to Paul Ackermann, it was a useful service to subscribers and the audience success far exceeded their numbers.
Reinventing what already exists
The reinvention of its evening newsletter is another example of the flexibility that Heidi.news has demonstrated.
Before the crisis, “Le Point Sciences” was sent from a different university every evening.
On the first day of confinement, it was transformed in two days into a specialized newsletter sent every evening from a different hospital, called "Le Point Coronavirus" . This allowed the newspaper to be as close as possible to hospital life, to collect testimonies from caregivers, directors, researchers, etc.
The Heidi.news website offers its subscribers the possibility to ask a question to the editorial staff via its website. This feature has become "a driving force" during the lockdown.
One of the cornerstones of journalism is listening overseas chinese in worldwide data to the reader. If you don't have direct input from the reader, you can try to put yourself in their shoes. There's no better way to do this than to let them choose the topics you're going to cover in this kind of period.
According to Paul Ackermann, it was a useful service to subscribers and the audience success far exceeded their numbers.
Reinventing what already exists
The reinvention of its evening newsletter is another example of the flexibility that Heidi.news has demonstrated.
Before the crisis, “Le Point Sciences” was sent from a different university every evening.
On the first day of confinement, it was transformed in two days into a specialized newsletter sent every evening from a different hospital, called "Le Point Coronavirus" . This allowed the newspaper to be as close as possible to hospital life, to collect testimonies from caregivers, directors, researchers, etc.