The Challenge
The West Australian believes two things; that time-poor Australians are increasingly unlikely to be home for the traditional 6pm TV news, and that there’s a market for a new type of news format later in the evening with more editorial and opinion.
The West Australian has a traditional print background but recognises its readers’ and subscribers' demand that it continues to evolve its offering beyond text and images to include engaging video content that can be consumed on or off platform.
To do this well, they had to investigate ways to adapt their business from a print-first organisation to an increasingly digital world. Part of this process was building studio spaces and performing market research into the product's viability. Instead of a traditional ‘hard’ news set, they created a ‘virtual’ set look with 3D neon glass panels/windows to stand apart. The West Australian also engaged with various consultants to provide advice on best-practice so that they could optimize the product.
Editorially, The West Australian wanted to ‘break free’, and to provoke audiences with bold and shrewd commentary on the daily news. Ben Harvey’s opinion pieces in The West Australian had a huge following, and they wanted to bring that audience across to YouTube.
Post launch, they continued to adjust both the YouTube Channel itself and the video content based on platform telemetry. Using YouTube analytics plus their own dashboard across all the platforms, The West Australian could see what worked best for the different vehicles and used this information to target audiences differently in their daily show teasers.