Site Specific: MinnPost

Political Focus Powers Nonprofit News Brand

In Minnesota's Twin Cities, MinnPost, launched in 2007, has built a news brand -- and a loyal following -- around political coverage and commentary. The nonprofit news site is now working on finding a sustainable buisiness model.
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Among mushrooming nonprofit news sites across the country, MinnPost enjoys a unique stature. It has built a news brand -- and a loyal following -- around trenchant political coverage and commentary, filling a niche where legacy media have pulled back.

The site has earned equal bona fides as the “right” way to do nonprofit news sustainably, pushing away from a dependence on foundations and toward a more user-supported model (an annual fundraiser studded with local pols, “MinnRoast,” nets $100,000 alone). Joel Kramer, MinnPost’s editor and CEO, offers a snapshot tour.

Launched: 2007

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Updates: Six times weekly

Unique visitors last month: 330,000

Content focus: Coverage of Minnesota politics and media; political and policy analysis and commentary

Geographic focus: State of Minnesota: “The two biggest sources are the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, but we have readership all over the state.”

Target demographic: “It’s psychographic: People who care about Minnesota and are intense news readers.”

Annual

operating budget: $1.3 million

Membership: 3,300 target by end of 2011; 250 sustaining members

Staff: 14 full-time; 6 weekly contracted journalists

Most popular features: Political and media coverage, MinnPOTUS (a roundup of coverage on Minnesota’s two current presidential candidates, Michelle Bachman and Tim Pawlenty)

Mobile platform and strategy: No currently available mobile platform; MinnPost is currently switching to an open source CMS and will launch a mobile platform by the end of 2011

Primary digital competition: StarTribune.com, Minnesota.PublicRadio.org, TwinCities.com (online version of St. Paul’s Pioneer Press)

What distinguishes MinnPost from the digital competition: “Analysis of politics and policy. We have a reputation for having extremely talented writers and thinkers on the staff—lots of experience. People turn to us to understand the why and how of what’s going on with serious subjects in the community.”

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