Categories: OLD Media Moves

Quartz’s web traffic grew 65 percent in past year

Quartz publisher Jay Lauf and editor Kevin Delaney sent the following note to the staff:

Good morning (and afternoon and evening), Quartz staff!

With our fourth full year of operation now underway, we wanted to take a moment to recap 2015 and look ahead to 2016. Our morning email seemed like the perfect format for this memo.

What to watch for in 2016

It’s already been a busy year. We are getting out of the gate early on traffic, revenue, big stories, and product development. Our audience continues to grow quickly: QZ.com is on pace to set another traffic record in January. Our coverage of everything from Taiwan’s big election this weekend to Amazon cutting back on middlemen is reaching an ever-growing readership. New obsessions like “Machines with Brains” and “Science of Learning” are off to a fast start.

In addition, we have secured more than three times as much revenue for 2016 as we had by the same time last year. (And that’s on top of 85% revenue growth in 2015 and 164% growth in 2014.) Another way to look at it: We have secured more revenue by January 19, 2016, than we booked in total for 2014! That growth is enabling us to expand this year across every division and every Quartz office around the world. As always, we are focused on recruiting new colleagues we all will be happy and proud to work with—it’s what makes Quartz great.

Building on that momentum, we’re about to release a slew of new products for our readers and advertisers. Quartz’s first big iPhone app is making its way to the App Store: Those of you who’ve been testing it know how fresh and engaging an experience it is. Atlas will open up this year as a platform for chart creators worldwide. We’ll also launch new emails, special projects, and events this year. Our advertising products, already leading the industry on quality and effectiveness, will continue to get better with new offerings and enhanced services for clients.

Lastly, you have all been witness to the constant iteration of the design and code of our flagship product, QZ.com. Some of this work is obvious; much of it quietly results in a faster, more elegant, and more rewarding experience on the website. Together, it amounts to the most prominent display of our commitment to putting readers first. You can be sure our engineering and design team will be keeping Quartz on the path of innovation and improvement this year.

While you were working in 2015

As you know, we achieved very strong results last year:

  • QZ.com’s global traffic grew to 16.8 million unique visitors in December, up 65% from a year prior. That’s all the more impressive because it’s all organic growth and came while many of our competitors saw flat or declining traffic. Data just out from comScore show how far behind we’ve left our original competitors, the Economist and Financial Times, and have us nipping at the heels of Fortune and Wired in the US. Globally, the story may be even stronger since 43% of our traffic comes from outside the US.
  • We set a new revenue record and the sales team opened 60 new advertising accounts, bringing our total active accounts last year to 105.
  • After first forming in May, our video team quickly generated more than 100 million views across Facebook, YouTube, and our beautiful, speedy, new on-site player.
  • We produced six premium events on four continents and set a new event revenue record as a result. That included our biggest event yet, in November.
  • The Quartz Daily Brief reached 180,000 subscribers and maintains its exceptional open rate despite many new competitors. It remains the gold standard of email newsletters.
  • Our reach expanded with a variety of new products. Atlas served up more than 10 million charts in just six months of existence. Quartz Africa doubled its readership after launching in June. We started a podcast, Actuality, in partnership with Marketplace. And we were featured by Apple as we launched a channel on their News app.
  • All of that work did not go unnoticed as we won 40 awards for our journalism, advertising, and events, including general excellence from the Online News Association and the readers’ choice award for hottest digital publication from AdWeek.
  • Quartz grew to nearly 150 full-time staff across North America, Europe, Asia, and Africa.

Obsession interlude

Quartz is a global business news brand with global ambitions. So it’s worth celebrating that more than 40% of our readers and an ever-growing portion of our revenue come from outside the US. Last year we launched Quartz Africa, expanded Quartz India, and grew our team in London—the largest office outside New York—to 16 people. This year we’ll remain focused on our international operations as a source of growth and distinction from our competitors.

We are also obsessed with Quartz’s culture: It is the number one factor you cite when asked what you like about working here. Quartz’s values of ingenuity, transparency, intelligence, generosity, and diversity are what make this place work so well. Your participation in the recently circulated staff survey is an important guide for us in this endeavor.

Matters of debate

You may be hearing chatter in the industry that VC-fueled publishers are hitting a growth ceiling. While that may be true for some, our strategy—high-quality journalism to steadily grow a high-value audience that attracts the right advertisers at the right price—has been the foundation of our success every year since we launched. And 2016 is starting out in the same vein. It’s that relentless focus that makes Quartz stand out in a crowded field.

Our traffic continues to grow more rapidly than our competitors—and it’s growing organically. But we’re in a quality vs. quantity game. Our reader demographics continue to be at the top of the rankings against bellwether competitors. We are not a mass, general-interest brand; specialization has been part of our model from the start. Our target advertiser is interested in our combination of the right audience, high-impact ads, beautiful design, and digital savvy.

Surprising discoveries

  • 42% of our ad revenue is delivered through mobile devices. That’s a striking and impressive stat while so many other publishers struggle to make money on mobile.
  • The livestream of our Next Billion event in November was viewed in more than 100 countries, another indicator of how we’ve touched on a topic of global importance.
  • Kevin Delaney plays the accordion.
  • The “Quartz cafe” in the New York office served 283 pots of coffee last year.
  • On a lark, we put T-shirts up for sale that said, “I survived the Fed rate hike of 2015,” and about a thousand people bought one. What a great, sophisticated audience we have. (Of course, recent market movements suggest the economy may not quite have survived…)

Our best wishes for a productive and prosperous 2016. Please send any news, comments, ideas, or achievements to the #general channel in Slack.

Chris Roush

Chris Roush was the dean of the School of Communications at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut. He was previously Walter E. Hussman Sr. Distinguished Professor in business journalism at UNC-Chapel Hill. He is a former business journalist for Bloomberg News, Businessweek, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Tampa Tribune and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. He is the author of the leading business reporting textbook "Show me the Money: Writing Business and Economics Stories for Mass Communication" and "Thinking Things Over," a biography of former Wall Street Journal editor Vermont Royster.

Recent Posts

Dynamo hires former Business Insider executive editor Harrington

Former Business Insider executive editor Rebecca Harrington has been hired by Dynamo to be its…

1 day ago

Bloomberg TV hires Kerubo as desk producer

Bloomberg Television has hired Brenda Kerubo as a desk producer in London. She will be covering Europe's…

2 days ago

Jittery CNBC staff reassured by new boss

In a meeting at CNBC headquarters Thursday afternoon, incoming boss Mark Lazarus presented a bullish…

2 days ago

Making business news accessible to a wider audience

Ritika Gupta, the BBC's North American business correspondent, was interviewed by Global Woman magazine about…

2 days ago

Rest of World hires Lo as China reporter

Rest of World has hired Kinling Lo as a China reporter. Lo was previously a…

2 days ago

Bloomberg rises to No. 7 biz news website

Bloomberg News saw strong unique visitor growth to its website in October, passing Fox Business…

2 days ago