Quartz (publication)

Quartz
Web address www.qz.com
Commercial Yes
Available in English
Owner Atlantic Media
Editor Kevin J. Delaney
Launched 2012 (2012)
Alexa rank
Decrease 1352 [1] (Global, March 2016)

Quartz (qz.com) is a digital global business news publication.[2] It is owned by Atlantic Media Co., the publisher of The Atlantic, National Journal, and Government Executive. Its team of 150 staff members was pulled together from prominent brands in business journalism: Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and The New York Times."[3] The four initial sponsors of Quartz were Boeing, Chevron, Cadillac, and Credit Suisse.[4] Quartz's core market is global business people, with its focus on international markets. Its news articles cover global economy news, ranging from geo-political conflicts to policies and regulations.[5]

History

Name

The name "Quartz" was chosen for various reasons. The name "Quartz" is named after a type of mineral that can be found all over the world and contributed to intense geological activity. The ability of this mineral would then associate with the brand identity, creating new brand's character: global, disruptive and digital. Furthermore, "Quartz" contains two of the rarest letters in English Language, Q and Z, making it a special-looking word.[6] When referring to the Quartz publication website, they took off all the ordinary characters leaving behind qz.com, making it a distinctive website. Also, the fact that there are fewer letters to type into a small mobile keyboard makes it a more user-friendly website.[7]

Launch

In September 2012, Quartz officially launched its website www.qz.com. Rather than a traditional homepage, it was designed as a mobile-first design website. The webpage was designed to deliver contents primarily to users of tablet and mobile first then website later in this order. Its founding team members were from several other news organizations, including Bloomberg, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), The Economist and the New York Times. According to its website, its team has a record of reporting in 115 countries and speaks 19 languages.[8] They are led by Kevin Delaney, a former managing director of WSJ.com, Zach Seward, a former WSJ newspaper's social media editor, and Gideon Lichfield, a from global news editor from The Economist, among other editors.[6]

Quartz's main office is located in New York, with correspondents and staff reporters in London, India, Hong Kong, Thailand, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C. and elsewhere. [8]

Quartz announced in September 2015 that they attracted a record of 16 million monthly unique visitors. Its year-to-date revenue has risen 80% since (2014) last year.[9]

Quartz India (2014)

Since the launch of Quartz in September 2012, India has consistently been served as a top contributor for Quartz's international traffic. With the growing demand in consuming business news via digital and mobile devices, together with the fact that there aren't many digital publishers available in the region, Quartz decided to launch Quartz India to cover the region.[10] In less than a year of the launch of Quartz India, the number of monthly unique visitors of Quartz India has grown from 200,000 initially to 500,000, representing approximately 5 percent of Quartz's overall traffic.

Quartz Africa (2015)

Quartz decided to launch its second international news site in Africa in June 2015.[11] The launch was similar to the launch in India in 2014 and it also partnered with GE. It views Africa as a potential market due to a high mobile penetration rate and a large number of innovation in the region.[12]

Initially, Quartz Africa focuses on 'Africa Innovators', 'Nigeria Now', and 'China in Africa'.[13] It aims to cover a global view of the continent as well as other international stories that are related to its African audience. Unlike any other medias, Quartz differentiates itself by focusing on technology, business and innovation in the continent, rather than the more crises-driven contents seen reporting elsewhere.[12]

Other Significant Launches

Quartz launched Atlas in 2015, a home for all of its charts. It can be accessed at atlas.qz.com. [14]

Quartz launched its first podcast in partnership with Marketplace, called Actuality. The podcast focuses on top international news and the conversations journalists might have when discussing how to cover a news story. [15]

Also Quartz launched its first mobile app. It is a semi-interactive app, because of the text-like design. https://appsto.re/us/Hholab.i

Audience

Quartz is a free digital news publication with no pay walls or registration. It relies entirely on native advertising and sponsored content to fund its business. This opens access to more readers, but raises questions of objectivity, since the company answers to advertisers rather than subscribers.[5] Quartz is designed to carry two ad formats. The "Engage" format is a large, non-IAB standard banner, while the "Bulletin" is a native and interactive ad format with sponsored content.

Quartz targets high-earning readers[6] who traditionally read other left-leaning publications. 60% of its readers access the site via mobile devices, and 40% of its readers are outside the United States. As of November 2015, there are 180,000 subscribers to the Quartz Daily Brief.[16]

Content

In the old traditional "Beats" in newspapers, news are divided into sections, such as domestic, business and finance, and world economy. However, Quartz organized differently, and calls their structure "Obsessions".[6]

Quartz Global News Editor Gideon Lichfield wrote that instead of using a fixed beats structure, Quartz structures its newsroom around a collection of phenomena- the patterns, trends and seismic shifts that are shaping the world its readers live in. He further explained his views, for instance "Financial markets" is a beat, but "the financial crisis" is a phenomenon. "The environment" is a beat, but "climate change" is a phenomenon. "Energy" is a beat, but "the global surge of energy abundance" is a phenomenon.[17] That structure, according to Lichfield, allows the organization to follow larger phenomenons in the business world and adapt to changes more quickly. Also, Lichfield views that the news topics are not fixed and often overlap in terms of their boundaries. Reporters thus have to be an all-rounder and not to limit themselves to specialize in certain topics.[6]

Design

Quartz website design is user-friendly for tablet and mobile users by allowing customers to scroll down without having to choose or click any links to read its news. Quartz is able to use the same website design for all types of devices, including tablets, mobile phones and laptops.[18] Quartz is hosted on WordPress.com VIP Cloud Hosting that can then be accessed across all platforms.[19]

Quartz extensively uses charts, created through their tool called "Chart Builder". It helps journalists create their own charts in a short period of time. Quartz is opening-sourcing Chart builder and is now used by many media organizations, including NPR, the Wall Street Journal, the New Yorker, CNBC, the Press-Enterprise, New Hampshire Public Radio, and FiveThirtyEight.[20] A searchable chart database called "Atlas" allows users to access, download, and embed past charts.

References

  1. "qz.com Site Info". Alexa Internet.
  2. "About". Quartz. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  3. Filloux, Frédéric (1 October 2012). "The Atlantic's Quartz: interesting … but will it make a profit?". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  4. "Is Quartz the Very Model of a Modern Publisher? - Digiday". Digiday. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  5. 1 2 "Quartz Press Center | Quartz". blog.qz.com. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 "5 things journalists should know about Quartz, Atlantic Media’s business news startup | Poynter.". www.poynter.org. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  7. "The Atlantic Names Its New Business News Site: 'Quartz.' Quartz? Yep. Quartz.". Forbes. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  8. 1 2 "Welcome to Quartz". Quartz. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  9. "Quartz". blog.qz.com. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  10. "Hello, India | Quartz". blog.qz.com. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  11. Jackson, Jasper. "Quartz Africa site to launch in June". the Guardian. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  12. 1 2 "Africa rising: why and how Quartz, GE (Media) want in". fipp.com. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  13. "Quartz launches in Africa with focus on innovation | M&M Global". mandmglobal.com. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  14. qz.com/434425/atlas-the-new-home-for-charts-and-data/
  15. qz.com/426585/introducing-actuality-quartzs-new-podcast-with-marketplace/
  16. "Press". Quartz. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  17. "On elephants, obsessions and wicked problems: A new phenomenology of news". news thing. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  18. "Quartz: The new digital-only publication with the tablet in mind | Lean back". www.economistgroup.com. Retrieved 2015-11-05.
  19. "A Behind The Scenes Look at Atlantic Media's Quartz". WordPress.com VIP. Retrieved 2015-11-05.
  20. "The most important things we learned in our first two years of chartbuildering". quartzthings.tumblr.com. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
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