Key Concepts from
The Age of News Experience
The book The Age of News Experience introduces a new vocabulary for the next phase of news media – where audience, experience, revenue, and AI begin to work together.

The Age of Experience
The next phase of media, where audiences expect news to feel more personal, emotionally resonant, connected, and worth returning to.
News Experience
The invisible layer audiences judge when deciding where to get their news, how long to stay, and whether to come back.
Experience is the Message
A modern update to McLuhan: in today’s media environment, meaning is shaped not only by the story or the platform, but by the full experience around it.
The Experience Gap
The growing distance between what audiences now expect from digital platforms and what many news outlets still provide.
Experience-Sequence
The idea that every article, video, alert, quiz, or newsletter is part of a larger chain of experience – and the real challenge is keeping that chain inside your brand.
Storytaking
A shift from asking only how journalists tell stories to asking how audiences actively take, navigate, interpret, skip, continue, and personalize them.
AXR: Audience-Experience-Revenue
A business framework showing how audiences translate into revenue through repeatable experiences, not through content alone.
The AXR Spectrum
A way to see where a publisher sits between a content-first outlet and a full experience ecosystem.
Experience Islands
Distinct audience experiences within a publisher’s broader brand – built around moments people want to repeat, beyond traditional sections like politics, sports, or cooking.
Misexperience & Disexperience
New ethical concepts for the AI era, focused on how sequences, personalization, and synthetic media can mislead audiences even when individual items appear accurate.
These concepts are only the starting point. The Age of News Experience shows how they connect into a practical framework for the next phase of news media.
