Scaling Up vs. Scaling Across: The $20 Million Mirage
Branding isn’t a business model, and “Smart Brevity” can’t outrun the “Corporate Tax” of centralized media.
New here? We’ve been building a framework for why local news is failing and how to fix it. We’ve explored the Sebastopol Protocol (a model for professionalizing tiny newsrooms) and the 160x Play (scaling infrastructure, not headcount). Today, we see those theories collide with the reality of Axios Local.
There is a specific kind of hubris that usually arrives in a custom font. It is the belief that if you get the branding just right—the proprietary typeface, the ultra-clean interface, the “Smart Brevity” trademark—the brutal economics of local news will simply get out of the way.
Five years ago, Axios launched its “Local” initiative with the kind of fanfare usually reserved for a moon landing. The promise was simple. They would take the “Smart Brevity” that conquered D.C. and New York and export it to the rest of us. They would succeed where everyone else had failed because they had the tech, the brand, and the venture-backed momentum.
Earlier this week, a report from A Media Operator dropped a cold bucket of water on that narrative. Five years in, Axios Local still isn’t profitable.
If this story feels familiar, it should. We’ve seen this movie before. It was called Patch.
The Unit Economics of Corporate Scale
To understand the struggle, you have to look at the mechanics of the venture model. A Media Operator notes that while Axios Local is generating roughly $20 million in annual revenue, it is doing so across 30 cities with a staff of approximately 100 people.
That averages out to about $660,000 in revenue per city.
On the surface, that sounds healthy for a local operation. But once you bake in the salaries of two or three professional journalists per city, the dedicated sales teams, and the centralized product developers in Arlington, the margins vanish. Axios isn’t just selling ads. They are trying to fund a venture-scale corporate headquarters on a local newsletter’s back.
This is where the Patch comparison moves from evocative to analytical. Patch failed because it attempted to “corporate” its way into community trust. They built a massive, centralized machine that required a level of national advertising that local markets simply couldn’t sustain. Axios has better design and sharper writing, but they are fighting the same gravity. They are trying to solve the “Last Mile” of local news with a Ferrari-level overhead.
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Scaling Up vs. Scaling Across
The industry is currently obsessed with “scaling up.” This is the belief that if you aren’t growing to 50 cities in five years, you aren’t ambitious enough.
But there is a fundamental difference between scaling up and scaling across.
Axios is scaling up. They are building a franchise. When you scale up, you inherit a “Corporate Tax.” You pay for the brand, the legal team, and the high-rise mindset. The problem is that local news doesn’t actually want to be a franchise. It wants to be a utility.
I believe the scale has to happen in the utilities, not the headcount.
In my research on the 160x Efficiency Play, I found that the cost of “professionalizing” a newsroom—benefits, HR, legal, tech—is the primary barrier to entry. If you scale the infrastructure in the background (scaling across), you allow a two-person team in any mid-sized market to have the same operational muscle as a 50-person team in Arlington.
When you scale the infrastructure instead of the newsroom, you drive your fixed costs toward the floor. You allow the reporters to focus entirely on the community rather than the corporate reporting structure.
The 8x Conversion Gap
The struggle for profitability at Axios also points to a fundamental misunderstanding of what people actually pay for.
In my own analysis of local engagement data—what I call the 8x Conversion Gap—I’ve found that Americans are roughly eight times more likely to pay for “civic participation” than they are for a standard “news product.”
People will pay to belong to their community. They will pay to solve a friction point in their daily lives. But they are increasingly hesitant to pay for a standardized product that feels like it was processed in a factory. Axios provides “Smart Brevity,” which is a high-quality product. But is it a civic utility? The data suggests that without that deep, local connection, you are just another notification in an overcrowded inbox.
Know a publisher trying to scale the “Last Mile”? Share this with them.
The Strategy for the Rest of Us
So, what is the lesson for the independent publisher or the small nonprofit?
Don’t chase the Ferrari.
Profitability is the ultimate editorial independence. When you build something that survives because it is essential to its neighbors, you don’t have an “off switch” held by a board of directors in another time zone.
The concrete next step for any publisher today is to perform a Fixed-Cost Audit. Look at your budget and ask how much of your money goes toward things the reader actually sees, and how much is being spent to maintain a professional veneer. We often see newsrooms anchored by centralized CMS licensing or outsourced ad ops that produce a negative margin in smaller markets. If a tool costs more to maintain than the revenue it enables, it isn’t an asset; it’s an anchor.
By focusing on geographic clustering and shared professional services—the core of the Sebastopol Protocol—you can build something that lasts. The “Last Mile” of local news won’t be won by the smartest guys in the room. It will be won by the ones who figure out how to stay in the room without burning the house down.
Join the Conversation
Is Axios Local a cautionary tale or just a slow starter? Are you seeing “negative margin” tools in your own newsroom? Let’s talk about it in the comments.
Wait, did I get it wrong? I’m human (well, mostly). If I’ve missed a detail or you have a correction to the data cited here, let me know.


