Juan Senor

Audiences are fragmenting, advertising revenue keeps falling, and the platforms that once delivered scale are now extracting it. Publishers and content businesses have to decide what readers will actually pay for, then rebuild the product, the newsroom, and the commercial engine around that decision. Most do not know where to start, and the cost of getting it wrong is the title itself.

Juan Senor is a journalist, broadcaster and adviser to publishers and broadcasters, helping senior teams rebuild commercial models and defend editorial credibility as platform dependency and AI-generated content reshape the media economy.

Download Profile
Check Availability
Check availability

Check Juan Senor's availability for your event

Complete the form below to check Juan Senor's availability. If you prefer, you can also send an email directly to our head office.

How would Juan Senor deliver their presentation at your event?
Please provide details of your budget for Juan Senor's speaking fee, including currency.

Full Profile

Why organisations work with Juan Senor

  • Co-edits the WAN-IFRA Innovation in News Media report and the FIPP Innovation in Magazine Media report, the two annual reference works on what is actually working commercially across global publishing.
  • Has advised hundreds of news organisations on every continent on the parallel work of rebuilding the news product and rebuilding the business model that funds it.
  • Speaks with authority on disinformation, AI slop, and platform dependency from inside the industry, not as an outside commentator.
  • Hosts the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity and the Reinvention Festival, with moderating credits at Money20/20 and the World Economic Forum, which means a senior commercial audience already knows him on stage.

Biography highlights

  • President and Principal Partner, INNOVATION Media Consulting Group, London.
  • Co-editor of the annual Innovation in News Media World Report (WAN-IFRA) and the Innovation in Media report (FIPP).
  • Former visiting fellow, Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, University of Oxford.
  • Former foreign affairs and defence reporter, PBS’s MacNeil-Lehrer NewsHour; team recipient of a DuPont-Columbia Journalism Award and Emmy nomination for interviews with Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin.
  • Former presenter and correspondent for CNBC Europe, EBN/Wall Street Journal TV, and International Herald Tribune Television.
  • Long-running host of the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity; moderator at the World Economic Forum, Money20/20, and the WAN-IFRA World News Media Congress.

Biography

Most news organisations are now wrestling with two structural problems at once. Their commercial model has been hollowed out by platform dependency. Their editorial product is competing for attention against AI-generated content produced at industrial scale, much of it designed to mimic real journalism.

Juan Senor has spent two decades inside that problem. As President of Innovation Media Consulting Group, he has advised hundreds of news and media organisations across every continent on the parallel work of rebuilding the news product and the business model that funds it. He co-edits the WAN-IFRA Innovation in News Media report and the FIPP Innovation in Magazine Media report, the closest the industry has to a running ledger of what audiences are willing to pay for.

His authority on the editorial side comes from the desk. He spent seven years as a war and conflict reporter for PBS NewsHour, where the team’s coverage won a DuPont Award and his own work earned an Emmy nomination. He went on to present for EBN-Wall Street Journal TV and CNBC Europe and served as London correspondent for International Herald Tribune Television. He is a former Visiting Fellow at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford, and is quoted regularly in The Economist and The Financial Times.

He has also hosted the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity for fourteen years and the Reinvention Festival for a decade, with moderating credits at Money20/20 and the World Economic Forum. That hosting work places him in front of the same senior commercial audience whose business problem he is now advising on.

Key speaking topics

  • Business model innovation in news and magazine media
  • Paid content, subscription, and reader-revenue strategy
  • Newsroom transformation and product strategy
  • Digital disruption and the platform economy
  • The future of journalism and trust in media
  • Media leadership and editorial commercial alignment

Ideal for

  • Publisher CEOs, editors-in-chief, and chief product officers in news and magazine media
  • CMOs and brand leaders rethinking owned-content and editorial strategy
  • Industry associations, media congresses, and creative festivals needing a credible main-stage host or keynote
  • Boards of content-driven businesses navigating subscription, advertising, and platform shifts

Audience outcomes

  • A current read on which paid-content models are working, with named publishers and live revenue figures
  • A clearer view of what editorial leaders should stop doing, not only what to start
  • Frameworks for aligning newsroom, product, and commercial teams around a single paid-content thesis
  • A working language for board-level conversations about media disruption, drawn from the WAN-IFRA report

Talks

Why fake news will save democracy

A working journalist’s argument that political attacks on the press have, perversely, rebuilt the case for paid, accountable journalism, and what that means for any organisation operating in the trust economy.

Key takeaways:

  • Why the collapse of free, ad-funded news created the opening for reader-paid journalism
  • How public trust is now earned at the level of the title and the byline, not the platform
  • What corporate communicators can learn from how serious newsrooms rebuild credibility

Charge or die: the paid-content imperative

A walk through the Innovation in News Media World Report’s central finding, that publishers who do not charge readers will not survive the next cycle, with case studies on what works.

Key takeaways:

  • The revenue mix that distinguishes growing publishers from shrinking ones
  • Paywall design choices that protect both reach and revenue
  • Where most subscription strategies fail, and how to fix them before launch

Videos

Testimonials

Juan was very helpful and cooperative in the lead up to the event and prepared well. It was also appreciated that he took the time to participate in the pre-event dinner. His presentation was powerful and interesting and illustrated with impact. I felt the lessons learned could have been communicated more clearly and compellingly.
Covidien
Your presentations are always thoughtful and provocative. Best regards.
The New York Times
Juan, Just a brief note to say many thanks for all your efforts on Friday when you came up to Warwick. I enjoyed meeting you and appreciated all your professionalism - and good humour! I hope our paths will cross sometime again in the near future..
Marketing Director, Warwick University
Thanks for your note Juan, and thanks for all your hard work too, the event was a great success and the client is very pleased. You did an excellent job and I hope that we have the opportunity to work together again.
Senior Producer, THA Communications Ltd for British Telecom's Annual Meeting