Innovation Starts Here:
The New Era of Local Journalism

Public Notice Portal: modernising access to public notices

One major innovation from the sector has been the development of the Public Notice Portal – an initiative from the local news media sector to further promote public notices to communities and enhance local democracy by harnessing the sector’s massive online audiences. Find out more.

Reach and Amazon: elevating precision in the online ad market

Amazon has partnered with Reach’s proprietary ad tech Mantis to leverage contextual customer data to support more targeted and relevant online advertising.

Mantis is an AI-powered tool originally developed for brand safety to prevent brands from appearing next to potentially harmful or inappropriate content. Reach has continued to develop Mantis’s capabilities, allowing it to place ads alongside contextually relevant content, enhancing the precision of targeted advertising. This partnership is among the first of its kind in Europe.

LOCALiQ: empowering local business through digital marketing

With the rapid growth of digital, publishers have adapted their businesses to respond to rapid changes in the marketplace. Newsquest for example has repositioned its advertising sales teams to be local digital marketing agencies so they can help local businesses with a wide range of digital marketing solutions, including advertising on its websites.

LOCALiQ works with thousands of SMEs throughout the UK helping them get the best out of their marketing and provides a broad range of digital solutions including SEO, online display, video, social, digital PR, as well as paid search.

Iliffe Media and Smartico: transforming print ads for digital

Iliffe Media has announced a new partnership with Smartico to introduce technology to rebuild print advertisements to make them suitable for use on websites.

The technology extracts all the relevant data from the print ad and then enriches it with images, data, and text from the web, using a mixture of AI and human work to do so.

How Southwark News is using video to bring local news to life

With social platforms reshaping how audiences consume information, Southwark News is turning to video to bring local journalism to life. The independent newspaper, based in south London, is embracing short-form video to reach new readers, particularly younger audiences.

Community reporter Evie Flynn has been central to this shift. She has helped to humanise news stories and boost digital reach. Her first video for Southwark News went viral, amassing 2.2 million views across platforms. Others have since followed, blending traditional reporting with accessible, visual storytelling. Evie said: “A news video should meet the same standards as a written article,” she says. “It’s just another way of telling important stories – stories that matter to the people who live here.”

Recognising the power of video to enhance engagement, the newsroom organised in-house workshops to upskill the wider team. Storyboarding, scripting, and editing techniques have become part of the daily workflow, helping reporters think visually as well as editorially. The approach has allowed the team to repurpose existing content, including press releases, into compelling digital formats. One such story about a Borough Market pub opening at 6am was transformed into a video that received nearly 200,000 views.

The team has also used video to give a platform to underrepresented local voices. A piece on South Dock Marina’s boat-dwelling community paired interviews with striking visuals, providing an entry point into deeper reporting. That video reached 10,000 viewers and drove traffic to the written article.

By putting community storytelling at the heart of its video strategy, Southwark News helping to redefine what local journalism looks like in the digital age.

Reach: building direct reader connections via WhatsApp

Reach’s work to develop direct relationships with readers using WhatsApp was recognised in the Best Idea to Encourage Reader Engagement category at the INMA Global Media Awards in April.

In its entry, published on the INMA website, Reach said: “Changes to Twitter, Facebook, Google and the growth of platforms like TikTok, Snapcha and Instagram have left publishers struggling to drive sustainable revenue streams from large audiences.

“After months of research, building prototype systems and taking learnings from newsletter publishing, Reach launched its first wave of WhatsApp Communities delivering news, sport, entertainment and one-off events directly to thousands of people – with no algorithm.”

Inverness Courier: driving digital growth through audience engagement and experimentation

With the fast evolution of media consumption habits, local publishers are rethinking their business models to keep pace. The Inverness Courier, a bi-weekly newspaper with a 200-year legacy in the Scottish Highlands, faced the challenge of shifting from print to digital while maintaining relevance among younger readers. With under-35s rarely buying print and 80 per cent of revenue still reliant on print sales, the title needed to embrace change to secure its future.

The Courier joined initiatives like the Google News Initiative and FT Strategies to jumpstart digital transformation. They introduced a paywall to drive digital subscriptions and explored new ways to connect with audiences, including newsletters tailored to user interests. Within six months, they had amassed 25,000 newsletter subscribers. The team tested different messaging on digital platforms and offered promotions aimed at younger readers, fostering a culture of rapid experimentation and learning with minimal financial risk.

Internally, a skills audit highlighted gaps in video production, graphic design, and data visualization – areas critical to boosting digital engagement. By leveraging existing social media expertise, the Courier expanded its digital subscription base to 3,000 paid users, creating a revenue stream that did not exist before these efforts.

National World and Waymark: revolutionising local advertising with AI

National World and Waymark, a company that uses AI video creation technology, have signed a local advertising deal that will feature Waymark’s Generative AI technology to allow National World’s digital and regional news outlets to sell affordable video ads to local businesses across the UK.

Through this partnership, National World can now offer its customers the ability to create high-quality commercials with professional voice-over in five minutes or less.

Innovating newsroom workflows with DotDash

Newsquest have developed an AI tool called DotDash News creator which can draft, “trusted stories from trusted notes.

This tool is central to our innovative approach, which includes the establishment of a safe ‘human-in-the-loop’ workflow. This critical step ensures that while we leverage the efficiencies of AI, we do so without compromising the quality and integrity of our journalism.”

Newsquest said in its entry for digital initiative of the year at the Regional Press Awards. Newsquest have also created AI-assisted reporter roles, a first in the industry, to utilise this tool. “This has allowed our traditional reporters to shift their focus to ‘human touch’ journalism and more in-depth content tailored to our loyal audience, enhancing our overall output of compelling, local news.”

Courtroom to inbox: National World reimagines local reporting for the digital age

Local news brands are reinventing audience engagement through specialist newsletters like the new court roundups from National World’s Sheffield Star and the Yorkshire Evening Post. These curated editions, led by Sarah Marshall and Nick Frame, blend exclusive reporting with personal editorial insight to deepen reader connection. By spotlighting court coverage – a proven driver of subscriptions and engagement – they are revitalizing a traditional beat for the digital era. The newsletters also offer added value through commentary on legal themes and courtroom moments, enhancing the reader experience. An integration of public interest journalism and strategic subscriptions, crafted to serve loyal local communities.