A new global study from FT Strategies, in partnership with Wan-Ifra and supported by Arc XP, examines how news organisations are evolving their newsroom strategies, workflows and skills amid the rise of AI, shifting audience behaviour and growing commercial pressures.

The report is available for download to Wan-Ifra subscribers. Source: Supplied.
The Future Newsrooms Study 2026 draws on survey responses from 448 newsroom leaders across 86 countries, as well as interviews with newsroom strategists, editors, executives and AI leaders from across the global news industry.
The report examines how publishers are redefining newsroom strategy and organisational design as the industry moves from a model centred on scale and distribution towards one increasingly shaped by audience relationships, community and distinctive journalism.
Key findings from the report:
Audience engagement has emerged as the most common strategic priority for newsrooms, overtaking reach, but many still struggle to translate strategic priorities into consistent coverage decisions.
Audience-first rhetoric often runs through destination-first workflows, as stories are developed for one primary destination before adapting them elsewhere, rather than for explicit audience needs.
Editorial budget growth depends on discipline, with newsrooms that discontinue low-impact initiatives more likely to report ability to spend on new initiatives.
Trust is increasingly built through relational signals, but reporters spend limited time on ‘post-publication’ tasks such as community engagement.
AI-enabled and creator-style journalism are both being held back by people-based barriers, including skills gaps, cultural resistance and limited training.
The report identifies four core gaps shaping the future newsroom:
- The Strategy Gap
- The Audience Trust Gap
- The Capability Gap
- The Skills Gap
Together, these areas form a framework for understanding how publishers are adapting to a more fragmented, platform-driven and AI-enabled media environment.
“What characterises the world's most successful news organisations is a relentless commitment to evolving their newsrooms to meet ever-growing audience expectations,” said Stig Ørskov, CEO of Wan-Ifra. “In today's AI-driven era, where editorial tools, audience needs and the competitive landscape are changing at unprecedented speed, how do editorial leaders shape newsrooms to deliver distinctive, relevant journalism? Never before has it been more urgent to understand how newsrooms are adapting to structural change and to learn from the experiences of peers.”
“We are delighted to publish this research with Wan-Ifra and Arc XP at such an important moment for the news industry. It offers a detailed picture of how publishers are responding to changes in AI, audience behaviour and newsroom strategy and we hope it will become a valuable resource for newsroom leaders globally,” said Lisa MacLeod, Director and Head of News at FT Strategies.
The report also highlights examples of newsroom innovation from publishers, including the Financial Times, Bonnier News, Grupo RBS, Stuff and Tagesspiegel, and examines how organisations are experimenting with editorial AI, audience participation, newsroom restructuring and new approaches to talent development.