The paper explores the fundamental shift in the digital media landscape, where clicks are progressively becoming less important as a crucial success metric. It follows the model's historical development from maximizing traffic to the advent of a new paradigm called zero-clicks, where users receive information immediately in their current surroundings without ever leaving the platform. The analysis identifies four major trends that are gradually altering the media's function: search engine algorithmic selection, social networks acting as information intermediaries, platform competition for audience retention, and, lastly, the emergence of artificial intelligence systems that can both produce and interpret content. Based on this, the paper makes the case that trust, context, competence, and long-lasting connections with the audience are now more important indicators of media success than visibility or clicks. Based on two primary criteria—control over distribution and the kind of value that the audience seeks—a conceptual framework containing four strategic models for the future growth of online media is given. Regardless of platform pressure, it is stressed that media that establish a distinct identity, specialized knowledge, or enduring direct connections with the audience will survive the zero-click world.
Георги Минев (Fri,) studied this question.