INMA releases report defining AI-first user journeys for news publishers
01 April 2026
22 January 2026
DALLAS (22 January 2026) – How news organisations must adapt to a media landscape increasingly shaped by influencers, creators, and social platforms is the focus of a new report released today by the International News Media Association (INMA).
“Bridging the Audience Gap: News Brands + Content Creators,” explores how the rapid rise of creator culture, declining trust in traditional media, and platform-driven news discovery are transforming how audiences — particularly younger generations — engage with information.
The report dives into:
Click here to download the report
Per the report, younger audiences are no longer seeking out news brands — they are encountering news through people. Platforms such as TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and podcasts have become primary gateways to information, with creators shaping political, cultural, and civic narratives. Nearly one in five U.S. adults now relies on news influencers as their primary source of information, rising to 38% among adults ages 18–29. By contrast, only 8% of adults over 65 do the same.
Written by INMA Ideas Blog Editor Paula Felps, “Bridging the Audience Gap: News Brands + Content Creators” offers an in-depth look at how influencers have become dominant distribution channels for news — and what publishers must do to remain relevant, trusted, and visible in this new ecosystem.
The report finds that trust in institutional media continues to decline, while creators build loyal communities through authenticity, personality, and platform-native storytelling. At the same time, 77% of news influencers have no formal journalistic background, and only 18% of teens can distinguish news from opinion or advertising, creating both opportunity and risk for the future information environment.
Rather than viewing creators as competitors, the report reveals that leading publishers are embracing two emerging models:
Case studies highlight dramatic audience and revenue impact, including a 664% engagement increase from creator partnerships at MLK50, hundreds of new subscriptions driven by creator explainers at Denník N, and a 94% rise in subscription starts following staff-driven video strategies at Wired.
Globally, the trend is accelerating. More than 70% of adults in Kenya, South Africa, Malaysia, and the Philippines rely on social media for news, while creator economies in India, Africa, and Latin America are rapidly scaling — opening new distribution and revenue pathways for news organisations.
“Bridging the Audience Gap” concludes that the future of news will not belong to institutions alone but to networks of journalists, creators, and community voices working together to rebuild trust, relevance, and reach in a transformed media landscape.
“Bridging the Audience Gap: News Brands + Content Creators” is available for free to INMA members and for purchase by non-members at INMA.org/reports.
About International News Media Association (INMA)
The International News Media Association (INMA) is a global community of market-leading news media companies reinventing how they engage audiences and grow revenue in a multi-platform environment. The INMA community consists of more than 23,000 members at 1,000+ news media companies in 100+ countries, representing tens of thousands of news brands. INMA is the news media industry’s foremost ideas-sharing network with members connected via conferences, reports, Webinars, virtual meetings, awards competitions, and an unparalleled archive of best practices. Through its initiatives, INMA focuses on subscriptions, advertising, product & tech, newsroom innovation, young audiences, and publisher relationships with Big Tech companies.