Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Back to Home
Topic

platform strategy

2 articles tagged with “platform strategy”


A close-up shot of various digital building blocks or puzzle pieces, some with abstract data patterns, fitting together seamlessly on a sleek, illuminated digital interface, symbolizing modular technology and integration.
AI & Publishing

InPublishing: Escaping the Platform Trap in Digital Publishing Technology

A feature published today by InPublishing makes the case for a modular, composable approach to digital publishing technology as an alternative to the two options that currently dominate publisher technology decisions: all-in-one monolithic platforms that lock publishers into a single vendor's roadmap, or fully bespoke CMS builds that require deep internal technical resource and constant reinvention. Written by Vicky Macey of Full Fat Things — a firm with over 80 years of combined publishing, product, and technology experience across Reach, Informa, and The Economist — the piece argues that publishers can access the tools they need today while building a stack that can grow with them, without compromising on accessibility, performance, SEO, or security standards. The article is relevant for any traditional publisher currently evaluating its digital infrastructure ahead of a period in which AI integration, personalisation, and multi-channel content distribution are becoming table stakes rather than competitive advantages. ---

InPublishing
A close-up shot of a smartphone screen displaying a Spotify audiobook chart, with blurred hands holding the phone and a bookshelf in the background, suggesting reading and listening.
Audiobooks

Spotify Launches Weekly Audiobook Charts in the U.S. and U.K.

Spotify introduced weekly Audiobook Charts for the United States and United Kingdom on February 27, 2026, with detailed analysis of the launch's implications for publishers appearing this week. The charts — accessible to both Free and Premium subscribers — rank the top audiobooks overall and by genre, drawing on listening behavior and engagement data from across the platform. The move brings audiobook discovery closer in line with how Spotify has long presented music and podcasts: through ranked, publicly visible popularity data. Publishers including Bloomsbury, HarperCollins, and Lagardère have previously credited Spotify with driving double-digit growth in audio sales, and chart placement could now become a meaningful new promotional asset — one that, if it functions as it does in music, allows publishers and authors to build marketing campaigns around chart positions. Spotify's Director of Audiobook Partnerships and Licensing, Duncan Bruce, framed the launch by drawing on the platform's experience in other verticals: The charts build on two features Spotify has rolled out in recent months: Page Match (February 2026), which lets users sync their position between a print book and the audiobook using a smartphone camera scan, and Audiobook Recaps (November 2025), which uses AI to generate short audio summaries of a listener's progress. Both features are designed to reduce listener dropout — the primary metric feeding chart rankings. For publishers, the practical implication is a new promotional surface and a new data signal. An audiobook that breaks into the top 10 on a genre chart gains discoverability not just from the chart itself but from the marketing materials publishers and authors can build around that placement. Spotify's Spotify for Authors platform, launched in November 2024, already provides analytics, audience demographic data, and social media asset generation tools — chart data will flow into those tools directly. ---

PPC Land