| Key Takeaway | Detail |
|---|---|
| Platform concentration | Google, Meta and Amazon accounted for roughly two thirds of the UK’s £46bn advertising market in 2025. |
| Publisher share under pressure | Traditional publishers are competing for an increasingly small slice of total ad spend, making diversification critical. |
| First-party data is now essential | Publishers with strong first-party data strategies are better positioned to command premium CPMs outside the platform ecosystem. |
| Direct sales remain vital | Publishers who invest in direct advertising relationships consistently achieve higher yields than those relying purely on programmatic. |
| Subscription revenue diversification | Publishers reducing dependence on advertising by growing subscription, events, and licensing revenue are showing stronger financial resilience. |
| AI search is a new threat | AI-powered search results are beginning to reduce referral traffic, putting additional pressure on publisher advertising volumes. |
| Publishrs helps publishers reclaim commercial value | Platforms like Publishrs support diversified revenue strategies with integrated subscription, advertising, and audience tools. |
The numbers are striking but not surprising. Google, Meta and Amazon captured approximately two thirds of the United Kingdom’s £46 billion advertising market in 2025, according to figures tracked by Press Gazette. For publishers who built their commercial models on advertising revenue, this concentration represents a structural challenge that requires more than incremental adjustment.
The question is no longer whether publishers can compete with the platforms for advertising dollars. The question is how they restructure their commercial models to reduce dependence on an ecosystem that increasingly works against them.
Understanding the Scale of Platform Dominance
Two thirds of total ad spend flowing to three companies is a degree of market concentration that would attract regulatory scrutiny in almost any other industry. In advertising, it has become the accepted reality, driven by the unmatched audience targeting capabilities, measurement infrastructure, and sheer scale that the major platforms offer to advertisers.
Why advertisers choose platforms over publishers
The reasons are not difficult to understand. Google and Meta offer advertisers precise audience targeting at massive scale, with sophisticated attribution and real-time optimisation that most publisher ad products cannot match. Amazon adds transactional intent data that no publisher can replicate.
From an advertiser’s perspective, the efficiency case for platform spending is strong. From a publisher’s perspective, it means competing for the remaining third of the market — or finding ways to make the platform ecosystem work harder for them.
What the remaining share looks like
The advertising revenue that flows outside the three dominant platforms is not evenly distributed. Premium publishers with large, loyal, and clearly defined audiences — financial titles, trade publications, specialist consumer media — command significantly higher CPMs than generic news sites relying on high volume and low engagement.
This is where first-party data strategy becomes a genuine commercial differentiator. Publishers who know their audiences in granular detail can offer advertisers something the platforms cannot: contextual relevance, brand safety, and genuine editorial environments that drive attention rather than merely measuring clicks.
Building Revenue Resilience Outside the Platform Ecosystem
The most financially resilient publishers in 2026 are those who have systematically reduced their dependence on platform-mediated advertising. The strategies they are using are well documented, even if execution remains difficult.
First-party data as a commercial asset
Publishers who have invested in registration and subscription walls have built something genuinely valuable: consented, authenticated first-party audience data. This data powers audience-guaranteed advertising products that can be sold directly to brand advertisers at premiums significantly above programmatic floor prices.
The investment required to build this capability is not trivial. It requires CMS infrastructure that supports registration and authentication flows, a data layer that connects audience behaviour to commercial audiences, and a sales team equipped to sell audience-based products rather than simple display placements. Publishrs supports publishers in building these capabilities through integrated audience and commercial tools designed for exactly this kind of strategy.
Direct advertising relationships
Publishers who maintained and invested in direct sales operations during the programmatic boom are now reaping the benefits. Direct-sold advertising consistently commands higher CPMs than open market programmatic, and it creates commercial relationships that are harder to disintermediate.
The challenge is that direct sales requires editorial scale and audience quality to attract the right brands. For publishers building that scale, the Publishrs advertising tools offer practical support for managing direct campaigns alongside programmatic operations.
The Role of Subscription and Diversified Revenue
The most significant strategic shift in publishing over the past five years has been the move away from advertising as the primary revenue model. This shift was accelerated by platform dominance, but it was also driven by a genuine recognition that subscription revenue is more predictable, more defensible, and better aligned with quality journalism.
What subscription success looks like
Publishers who have successfully grown subscription revenue share some common characteristics. They have invested in understanding what their most loyal readers genuinely value. They have created content experiences — newsletters, podcasts, events, data tools — that deliver that value consistently. And they have built the technical infrastructure to convert casual readers into paying subscribers at meaningful rates.
Research from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism shows that publishers with diversified revenue streams — combining subscriptions, advertising, events, and licensing — significantly outperform those dependent on a single revenue source. The arithmetic is straightforward: diversification reduces risk and creates multiple paths to growth.
Events and licensing as revenue pillars
Beyond subscriptions, events have re-emerged as a significant revenue opportunity for publishers with strong audience relationships. Industry conferences, awards programmes, and reader events generate revenue that the platforms cannot mediate. Licensing — syndication deals, data products, content partnerships — represents another category that is often underdeveloped by publishers focused primarily on advertising.
What the Google Fine Means for Publishers
The European Commission’s €2.95 billion fine against Google for anticompetitive behaviour in online advertising is a landmark moment, but publishers would be wise not to wait for regulatory outcomes to reshape their commercial strategy. Competition law moves slowly. Commercial strategy needs to move faster.
Regulatory intervention alone won’t solve the structural problem
Even significant regulatory action is unlikely to reverse the fundamental dynamics that have driven platform concentration. Google and Meta’s advertising dominance is built on audience scale, data infrastructure, and measurement capabilities that took years to construct. Regulatory remedies may introduce marginal improvements to the competitive landscape, but they will not restore the advertising economics of the pre-platform era.
What publishers can control is their own commercial architecture — the product mix, the audience relationships, and the technology infrastructure that determines how much revenue they can generate from the audiences they have built. Investing in that infrastructure is the work that matters.
How much of UK advertising spend do Google, Meta and Amazon control?
According to Press Gazette analysis, the three platforms captured approximately two thirds of the UK’s £46 billion advertising market in 2025, leaving the remainder to be divided among thousands of other publishers and media owners.
What can publishers do to reduce dependence on platform advertising?
Key strategies include building first-party data assets, growing direct advertising relationships, developing subscription revenue, investing in events and licensing, and ensuring their technology infrastructure supports multiple revenue streams simultaneously. Publishrs provides tools that support all of these approaches.
Is programmatic advertising still viable for publishers?
Programmatic remains a meaningful revenue source for most publishers, but it should be one component of a diversified commercial strategy rather than the primary driver. Floor price management, private marketplace deals, and header bidding optimisation can all improve programmatic yields.
What is first-party data and why does it matter for publishers?
First-party data is information collected directly from your own audience through registrations, subscriptions, and site behaviour. It enables publishers to create audience-guaranteed advertising products and personalised content experiences that are not dependent on third-party tracking infrastructure.
How are publishers diversifying revenue beyond advertising?
The most successful approaches include subscription models (metered paywall, freemium, hard paywall), events (conferences, awards, roundtables), licensing and syndication, data products, e-commerce, and branded content partnerships.
What role does technology play in building publisher revenue resilience?
Technology is foundational. Publishers need CMS infrastructure that supports registration and authentication, a data layer that connects audience and commercial operations, and tools that manage multiple revenue streams efficiently. Publishrs is built to support exactly this kind of integrated commercial architecture.
Platform concentration in advertising is a structural reality, not a temporary disruption. The publishers who will thrive are those who take that reality seriously and build commercial models that don’t depend on reversing it. If you’re rethinking your revenue strategy, Publishrs offers the tools and expertise to help you build a more resilient commercial foundation.





