As Enders Analysis recently argued, habit has become the north star for publishers. Light users haven’t vanished — they’ve simply stopped arriving at the front door, with “what happened” increasingly answered upstream by platforms and AI summaries. The homepage now primarily services the already-converted; breadth alone does not create defensibility. Durable value, the analysts wrote, depends on occupying a recurring need state through vertical products, distinctive voice and community, and reinforcing it through authority and belonging. The Mail’s strategy is essentially a live response to that diagnosis.
Tom Harrington was quoted in The Times on "What next for Netflix as Reed Hastings exits after almost 30 years?"
20 April 2026“Netflix didn’t invent streaming, but they managed to perfect it a lot faster than anyone else,” Tom Harrington, head of television at Enders Analysis, said. “Netflix were, and still are, several years ahead of everybody in terms of the user interface, which basically means that they set the perception of streaming.”
The streaming giant has been seeking to grow revenue from new programming formats such as video podcasts, live sporting events and video games. “For a decade, it was quite easy for Netflix, they could have a pretty simplistic offering,” Harrington said. “Now, they’re fighting amongst everyone else for incremental growth.”
The market was less convinced by the growth story, particularly given Hastings’ departure, and shares fell nearly 10 per cent after the results. The problem for analysts is that Netflix is in uncharted territory. “There are no clear parallels on which to base potential penetration,” Harrington said.
Enders Analysis was mentioned in ISPreview on "Alternative UK Broadband Networks May Have to Hike Prices to Survive"
15 April 2026Analyst firm Enders Analysis underlined this at the end of 2025 by calculating that the UK’s largest alternative gigabit broadband networks (i.e. BT / Openreach challengers) collectively suffered losses of £1.5bn in 2024 (up from £1.304bn in 2023 and £755m in 2022) – driven by high interest rates and rising build costs.
Claire Enders was quoted in the Financial Times on "Can the traditional British tabloid survive the digital age?"
15 April 2026“It’s very competitive,” said Claire Enders, a media analyst. “The audience who wants to hear about celebrities can now hear it from them directly. There are a lot of influencers who have taken the market from mainstream media.”
A report by Enders in April said that social media sites like TikTok and WhatsApp had become “primary spaces” for information, commentary and discussion, showing the extent of the new competition. “These environments are engineered for sustained engagement-infinite scroll, algorithmic reinforcement and low friction — in contrast to publisher sites,” it said.
An Enders note said that publishers were building up their columnists and star reporters as “creators in their own right”. It pointed to “publisher-owned personalities and episodic formats” as a means to attract and retain paying audiences.
Niamh Burns was quoted in Investors' Chronicle on "AI offers new revenue for media stocks – but at what cost?"
13 April 2026Enders Analysis senior research analyst Niamh Burns, meanwhile, believes the marketplaces being built by the likes of Microsoft are a genuine business necessity, not just a public relations stunt, because tech companies need legally sound data for their growing number of enterprise clients.
In parallel, the European Commission is investigating Google over its use of publisher content in AI without “appropriate compensation”, while the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority is currently consulting on “publisher conduct requirements” to address the structural market harms caused by the search giant.
“It is not one-way traffic with journalists leaving to become creators,” said Laura Darcey, research analyst at Enders Analysis.
“Journalists that have grown up within legacy media can find new freedoms and monetization opportunities by branching out alone, but we’re not about to see a mass exodus. Journalists will find themselves competing in the broader attention and subscription economy where challenges of subscription fatigue and limited discretionary spending apply.”
“While going it alone creates a direct avenue for reaching a journalist’s most ardent fans, and global distribution platforms create meaningful scale effects, many independent journalists have small audiences, with most Substack newsletters remaining small scale in terms of paid subscriber numbers,” said Enders’ Darcey.
Karen Egan, head of telecoms at Enders Analysis, says Schüler has done “phenomenally well to grow ebitda” as cheaper, customer-focused innovators threaten VMO2’s historic strengths. “Perhaps too well, as there is some sense that there could have been more of an eye to the longer-term financials and brand reputation at times.”
Lenders including the UK’s taxpayer-backed National Wealth Fund, NatWest and Lloyds have taken control of broadband provider Gigaclear after taking a significant haircut on its near-£1bn debt pile.
Karen said the restructuring was likely to be one of many in the troubled altnet sector.
“It’s not an easy thing to pull off but is the right move for the company — putting it on a better footing as a going concern and in consolidation negotiations,” she added.
Claire Enders was quoted in Campaign on "Is Cindy Rose right to link bonuses to WPP’s overall performance?"
1 April 2026"I completely approve of her strategy to encourage a real sense and actions related to the overall well-being of the company."
"There has never been a common culture at WPP – it’s been a holding company structure for so long and created via acquisitions. Rose is attempting to create a team culture of shared achievement, which is bound to be a positive direction."
In early March, OpenAI pulled back from Instant Checkout, a plan in which consumers would shop for goods directly inside ChatGPT. This was after a five-month trial in which the company appears to have found that building a successful commerce platform is harder than it looks. “Like many of OpenAI’s initial launches, it felt more like a public demo of what the tech could do than a very sustained effort to set up a commerce business,” said Niamh Burns, an analyst at Enders.
Then, last week, it ditched Sora, its viedo-generation platform, and with it a $1bn deal in which Disney was going to license OpenAI-generated content to “unlock new possibilities in imaginative storytelling”. This was strategic for OpenAI, because Sora was a money pit. It was awkward for Disney, which reportedly learned that the platform would be axed an hour before the public did.