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Stuff (website)
Stuff (website)
from Wikipedia

Stuff is a New Zealand news media website owned by newspaper conglomerate Stuff Ltd (formerly called Fairfax). As of early 2024, it is the most popular news website in New Zealand,[2] with a monthly unique audience of more than 2 million.[3]

Key Information

Stuff was founded in 2000,[4] and publishes breaking news, weather, sport, politics, video, entertainment, business and life and style content from Stuff Ltd's newspapers, which include New Zealand's second- and third-highest circulation daily newspapers, The Post and The Press, and the highest circulation weekly, Sunday Star-Times, as well as international news wire services.

Stuff has won numerous awards at the Newspaper Publishers' Association awards including 'Best News Website or App' in 2014[5] and 2019,[6] and 'Website of the Year' in 2013[7] and 2018,[8] 'Best News Website in 2019',[9] and 'Digital News Provider of the Year' in 2024 and 2025.[10][11]

History

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Independent Newspapers Ltd, 2000–2003

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The former New Zealand media company Independent Newspapers Ltd (INL), owned by News Corp Australia, launched Stuff on 27 June 2000 at a cybercafe in Auckland, after announcing its intention to go online more than a year earlier.[1][12] The development of Stuff was supported by Don Higgins, Corporate Development Manager and Mark Wierzbicki, founding Internet Business Manager. Advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi conceived the name "Stuff", and INL had to buy the domain name from a cyber squatter.[1] In its first month, the site had 120,000 unique visitors.[12] At the time, Wierzbicki described the name as a copywriter's dream, although he conceded that "it's not without risk, especially if we stuff up." The start up was built by a group of engineers from a few tech companies in Wellington led by founding CTO and engineering manager Will Everitt and project manager Bill Alp and used a software platform from News Corp Australia's news.com.au.

Fairfax Media and Nine Entertainment, 2003–2020

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On 30 June 2003, INL sold its publishing assets including The Dominion Post, The Press, and the Stuff website to Fairfax Media.[13][14]

Fairfax upgraded the website in December 2006, and again on 4 March 2009, adding the ability for visitors to personalise the homepage.[15] The first mobile phone news service from Stuff began in 2003, in a partnership with Vodafone New Zealand. On 21 April 2009, Stuff launched a dedicated mobile site.[16]

Logo used from 2016 to 2022

On 1 February 2018, the parent company of Stuff changed its name from Fairfax New Zealand Limited to Stuff Limited.[17] In July 2018 Stuff was merged into Nine Entertainment.[18]

Sinead Boucher, 2020–present

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On 25 May 2020, Nine Entertainment sold Stuff and its holdings including the Stuff website to Stuff's CEO Sinead Boucher for NZ$1, with the transaction completed on 31 May. This marks the return of the company into New Zealand ownership.[19][20][21]

On 30 May 2022, Stuff updated its logo and brand colours.[22]

On 27 April 2023, Stuff confirmed that it would launch separate subscription-based websites for three of its newspapers: The Post, The Press, and Waikato Times. These websites will co-exist with the Stuff news website, which will remain free.[23]

On 17 January 2024, Stuff rolled out a new website and app with a new layout and design. It was immediately met with overwhelming criticism, due to a number of features and sections previously being available removed, including the search function and the technology section. The new design also caused a number of functionality issues, mostly around loading the new homepage with several users reporting the homepage to be stuck in a loading loop. A story posted by Stuff touting the new design and also seeking feedback received over 300 responses with about a dozen positive and the rest negative. Comments on this story were later removed. Since the rollout, traffic and readership has reportedly dropped by up to 20%.[24]

On 6 October 2024, Stuff Digital's Head of Growth Janine Fenwick confirmed that Stuff.co.nz would be reorganising its regional news content. Content from the Stuff Group's North Island newspapers Taranaki Daily News, Manawatu Standard and the Wairarapa Times-Age would be hosted on The Post's website while South Island newspapers The Southland Times, Nelson Mail, Timaru Herald and Marlborough Express would be hosted on The Press's website. This reorganisation was part of the Stuff Group's transition towards a paywall system, with readers being offered unlimited access to content on The Post, The Press and Waikato Times websites for a NZ$1.99 weekly subscription fee.[25]

In December 2024, the Stuff website was reorganised under the Stuff Digital umbrella, a division that also includes the social media platform Neighbourly and the evening news bulletin ThreeNews.[26][27] In June 2025, online retailer Trade Me acquired a 50 percent stake in Stuff Digital and its assets including the Stuff website.[28]

Awards and nominations

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Stuff.co.nz has won numerous awards at the Newspaper Publishers' Association awards (currently branded as the Voyager Media Awards) including Best News Website or App in 2014 and 2019,[29][30] and Website of the Year in 2013 and 2018.[31][32]

Content and coverage

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In July 2008, during the trial of Clayton Weatherston, press.co.nz, a subsidiary section on Stuff, accidentally ran the headline "Guilty of Murder" the day before the jury delivered the verdict. The article was quickly withdrawn, and Fairfax executive editor Paul Thompson said it was a mistake "we take very seriously."[33]

On 17 April 2013, to celebrate the passing of same-sex marriage in New Zealand, the colour of the Stuff logo was changed from black to the colours associated with the pride flag.[34]

In 2017, Stuff's first podcast Black Hands received over 3 million downloads[35] and was the number one podcast in five countries. Stuff also produced Gone Fishing with Radio New Zealand, which won podcast of the year[36] at the 2019 NZ Radio Awards.

In 2018 Stuff launched Quick! Save the Planet[37] to increase news coverage of climate change in New Zealand and in 2019 Stuff joined the Covering Climate Now[38] international initiative.

Stuff Circuit

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In 2019, Stuff launched an investigative journalism documentary series called Stuff Circuit with funding from New Zealand on Air. Notable titles and topics have included Big Decision (abortion law reform), Life + Limb (New Zealand's military involvement in the War in Afghanistan), False Profit (which focused on conspiracy theorist and New Zealand Public Party founder Billy Te Kahika), Deleted (which looked at New Zealand companies alleged to be complicit in human rights abuses in Xinjiang), Disordered (which focused on the treatment of people with Foetal Alcohol Syndrome), and Fire and Fury (which looked at vaccine disinformation and conspiracy theories in the wake of the 2022 Wellington protests). The documentaries are published on Stuff's website.[39][40]

In November 2019, Stuff's Life + Limb documentary's coverage of unexploded ordnance on New Zealand Defence Force firing ranges in Afghanistan prompted Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to order the clearing of the ranges.[41][42]

See also

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References

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Sources

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  • Crean, Mike (2011). The Press: First with the News: An Illustrated History. Auckland: Random House NZ. ISBN 978-1869795627.
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Stuff.co.nz is a New Zealand-based online news platform launched on 27 June 2000 by Independent Newspapers Limited, initially as a digital extension of print media amid early adoption in the country. It serves as the flagship website of Stuff Limited, New Zealand's largest news publisher, which operates dozens of regional newspapers, magazines, and digital services, reaching approximately 3.5 million unique monthly users. Originally developed under skepticism as an "unwanted child" of traditional , Stuff.co.nz evolved into New Zealand's most visited news site by leveraging irreverent branding and comprehensive coverage of , sports, , and lifestyle topics. The platform transitioned through ownership by (from 2003), becoming Fairfax New Zealand before rebranding to Stuff Limited in 2018 under ; in 2020, CEO Sinead Boucher acquired full control for a nominal $1 via , establishing it as a New Zealand-owned entity focused on sustainable as a certified B . By 2025, Boucher retained primary ownership of the Stuff Group, with a 50% stake in its digital arm sold to , reflecting adaptations to diversify revenue amid declining . Stuff Limited emphasizes a mission of independent, community-oriented funded through subscriptions, , and partnerships, while maintaining an editorial code that aspires to political non-partisanship and avoidance of . Nonetheless, the outlet has confronted internal critiques of systemic shortcomings, notably issuing a 2020 apology for decades of coverage that perpetuated negative stereotypes and underrepresentation of perspectives, prompting structural reforms to enhance diversity and accuracy in reporting on indigenous issues. External assessments have characterized its editorial positions as left-leaning, particularly in social and cultural matters, though it scores highly for factual reliability due to sourcing practices. This self-examination underscores ongoing tensions in media between commercial imperatives, audience trust, and representational equity, with Stuff pioneering digital innovations like investigative podcasts amid broader industry shifts away from print dominance.

History

Founding and Early Development (2000–2003)

Stuff.co.nz was launched on June 27, 2000, by Independent Newspapers Limited (INL), the parent company of major print titles including The Dominion Post and , as a digital news portal aggregating content from its newspaper network. INL's managing director, Mike Robson, announced the site via press release, positioning it as an "edgy and irreverent" brand amid a nascent landscape where dial-up access dominated and competitors like Telecom's Xtra, TVNZ's Nzoom, and Wilson & Horton's portals held sway. The name "Stuff" was selected from shortlisted options including "Pavlova" and "Deep and Wide," reflecting a deliberate choice for a casual, versatile term to appeal to a broadening digital audience skeptical of traditional media's pivot. Initially viewed internally as an "unwanted child" due to print executives' doubts about digital viability—exacerbated by high development costs and limited penetration—the site focused on syndicating articles with basic elements like weather and classifieds, aiming to extend INL's reach beyond physical circulation. Early content emphasized breaking news, sports, and local stories drawn from INL's 18 regional dailies and weeklies, with minimal original digital reporting as the emphasis remained on cost-efficient aggregation rather than web . Traffic grew steadily from near-zero, benefiting from INL's promotional tie-ins in print editions, though exact user metrics from the era are sparse; by mid-decade, it had begun outpacing rivals through user-friendly navigation and real-time updates unavailable in print. Through 2001–2003, Stuff expanded its scope incrementally, incorporating email newsletters and rudimentary search functionality while navigating the dot-com bust's aftermath, which reinforced INL's conservative approach to online investment. The platform's growth mirrored rising household adoption in , from approximately 30% in 2000 to over 50% by 2003, enabling broader engagement despite technical constraints like slow loading times. This period culminated in INL's sale of its New Zealand assets to Australia's in 2003, marking Stuff's transition from a print extension to a standalone digital asset under new ownership, though operational continuity persisted initially.

Fairfax Media Ownership and Expansion (2003–2018)

In April 2003, Australian-based Fairfax Media acquired the New Zealand publishing assets of Independent Newspapers Limited (INL) for NZ$1.88 billion, establishing Fairfax New Zealand Limited and gaining control over major titles including The Dominion Post, The Press, and the digital platform Stuff.co.nz. This transaction, announced on April 14, 2003, transferred approximately 80 publications and positioned Fairfax as the dominant player in New Zealand's print media market, with Stuff.co.nz serving as the centralized online hub for content aggregation from these outlets. Under Fairfax ownership, Stuff.co.nz underwent significant digital expansion, leveraging synergies with print operations to drive online traffic growth amid rising internet adoption in . By July 2005, the site achieved a milestone of 1 million unique monthly viewers, reflecting investments in content syndication and early digital infrastructure. This growth continued, with the platform evolving into 's largest news website by integrating multimedia features, sections, and real-time updates from Fairfax's regional and metropolitan newspapers. Digital advertising revenues began outpacing print declines in certain years, such as a reported uptick in digital income despite an 18.8% drop in overall operating profit for the ending 2014. Fairfax New Zealand further expanded Stuff's ecosystem through strategic initiatives, including enhanced mobile optimization and data-driven personalization by the mid-2010s, which boosted monthly audiences to over 1.8 million by 2015. The company maintained a portfolio approach, using Stuff as a distribution channel for Fairfax's 28 titles and specialized magazines, though later years saw print rationalization—such as the planned closure or sale of select rural papers in early 2018—to redirect resources toward digital scalability. On February 1, 2018, Fairfax rebranded to Stuff Limited, emphasizing the site's centrality in a multi-platform model that generated $8 million in additional digital revenues for the year ending June 2018, despite a 7.5% overall revenue decline to $301 million. This period culminated in Fairfax's July 2018 merger with , transferring Stuff's operations but marking the end of direct Fairfax control.

Nine Entertainment Transition and Challenges (2018–2020)

In July 2018, Fairfax Media announced a merger with Nine Entertainment Co., under which Nine would acquire a 51.1% stake in the combined entity, incorporating Fairfax's New Zealand operations including Stuff Limited, which had rebranded from Fairfax New Zealand Limited earlier that year. The merger received approval from Australian competition authorities in November 2018, following shareholder votes, and was finalized shortly thereafter, placing Stuff under Nine's ownership as a non-core asset outside its primary Australian broadcast and publishing focus. Immediately post-merger, Nine's CEO Hugh Marks indicated that divesting Stuff was under consideration, amid reports that Fairfax had transferred approximately NZ$55 million from Stuff's cash reserves to support the deal, contributing to perceptions of Stuff as a underperforming unit relative to other Fairfax assets. The transition brought immediate operational pressures, including anticipated cost-cutting and executive reshuffles across the merged entity, with Stuff facing integration challenges in a declining print and digital advertising market. Nine initiated a strategic review in early 2019, actively seeking buyers for Stuff but rejecting offers deemed below , leading to a temporary retention of the asset while signaling long-term divestment intentions. Financially, Stuff reported a 10% revenue drop to NZ$252.7 million in Nine's 2018-19 , attributed to broader market headwinds in publishing, though it achieved a modest 3% revenue increase to NZ$129 million in the first half of 2020 amid ongoing sale efforts. Challenges intensified through 2019-2020, as Nine characterized Stuff as a "failing" with persistent declines, prompting internal preparations to shutter operations if no viable sale materialized by mid-2020. Rival NZME expressed interest in acquiring Stuff for NZ$1 in May 2020, but regulatory hurdles from prior merger denials loomed, ultimately leading Nine to finalize a by CEO Sinead Boucher for NZ$1 on May 25, 2020, with completion by May 31. As part of the transaction, Nine retained of Stuff's printing plant, leasing it back, and absorbed an approximately A$40 million impairment charge. This period underscored Stuff's vulnerability to priorities, with Nine prioritizing Australian core operations over New Zealand-specific investments amid global shifts in .

Sinead Boucher Era and Independence (2020–present)

In May 2020, amid the and uncertainty over potential foreign takeovers, Stuff's CEO Sinead Boucher led a , acquiring the company from its Australian parent for NZ$1, with the transaction completing on 31 May 2020. This move transitioned Stuff to full ownership under Boucher's control via her Kenepuru Holdings, providing operational and shielding it from overseas corporate priorities. Boucher, who had served as CEO since August 2017, described the acquisition as ushering in a "great new era" focused on sustainable free from external pressures. Under Boucher's ownership, Stuff pursued strategic shifts to enhance resilience and audience trust. In 2021, the company exited as a traffic source, a decision that initially risked referral declines but resulted in stable overall traffic and improved reader perceptions of reliability after seven months. Boucher emphasized experimentation with direct audience engagement over platform dependency. By 2022, reflecting on the buyout's second anniversary, she highlighted adaptations to post-acquisition challenges, including diversified streams to support operations. Leadership evolved amid ongoing restructures. In June 2023, Boucher announced a major overhaul, establishing three new digital hubs for specialized content and refining executive roles to streamline decision-making. On 31 May 2023, she stepped down as CEO of Stuff Group, appointing Laura Maxwell to the role while assuming positions as Executive Chair and Publisher to focus on long-term vision. In March 2025, Boucher restructured Stuff Digital's shares from one to one million, all held solely by her, consolidating control over the core online platform including stuff.co.nz. Later that year, Stuff sold a stake in Stuff Digital to , with Boucher chairing the resulting board to foster classifieds-news synergies. These changes aimed to adapt to digital market dynamics while maintaining editorial focus.

Ownership and Governance

Corporate Evolution and Key Acquisitions

Stuff Limited evolved from the New Zealand subsidiary of , established following Fairfax's acquisition of Independent Newspapers Limited (INL) in June 2003 for NZ$1.88 billion, which included the recently launched stuff.co.nz digital platform and a portfolio of regional newspapers dating back to the . This deal consolidated Fairfax's control over New Zealand's print and emerging , transforming disparate local titles into a unified operation under Fairfax New Zealand Limited. The 2018 merger between and Co., valued at A$4 billion, integrated Stuff's operations into the larger Australian media group, prompting a to Stuff Limited on 1 February 2018 to emphasize its digital-first identity while retaining ownership of over 20 newspaper mastheads. However, regulatory scrutiny over foreign ownership intensified, leading to the abandonment of a proposed merger with NZME in 2019 due to Commerce Commission concerns about media concentration. In response, divested Stuff to a New Zealand-based led by CEO Sinead Boucher, completed on 31 May 2020 for a nominal NZ$1, backed by local investors including the Tupu Ora consortium, thereby restoring full domestic control. Key acquisitions shaping Stuff's portfolio include the foundational 2003 INL purchase, which provided its core newspaper assets such as The Dominion Post and , and subsequent regional consolidations under Fairfax. Post-independence, Stuff expanded through targeted buys, notably acquiring the Times-Age on 15 May 2024 to bolster its footprint. In a significant recent development, on 3 June 2025, Stuff agreed to sell a 50% stake in its Stuff Digital subsidiary—encompassing stuff.co.nz and 3News—to Group for an undisclosed sum, forming a to integrate news with classifieds in property, motors, and jobs. This partial divestiture reflects strategic adaptation to digital revenue pressures while retaining .

Leadership and Decision-Making Structure

Stuff Limited operates as a privately held company under the ownership of Sinead Boucher, who acquired it via management buyout from Nine Entertainment on May 26, 2020, for NZ$1. Boucher serves as owner, publisher, Executive Chair, and Chief Executive Officer, resuming the CEO role in March 2025 following the departure of Laura Maxwell, who had held the position since May 2023. As sole proprietor of Stuff Group—which encompasses masthead publishing and digital operations—Boucher maintains direct oversight of strategic direction, having consolidated her shareholding to one million shares in Stuff Digital by March 2025. The executive structure features specialized managing directors for core divisions, reflecting a December 2024 operational separation into distinct digital and print/masthead entities to enhance focus and sustainability. Nigel Tutt was appointed Managing Director of Stuff Digital in June 2025, reporting to a board chaired by Boucher with equal representation from Trade Me—following Trade Me's acquisition of a 50% stake in the digital arm—and Stuff Group. Joanna Norris holds the role of Managing Director for Masthead Publishing, overseeing print and storytelling operations as a member of the executive leadership team. This divisional model delegates operational decisions to managing directors while reserving high-level governance and resource allocation to Boucher. Decision-making emphasizes owner-led , enabled by the post-buyout from larger media conglomerates, with strategic choices prioritizing long-term viability over short-term pressures. Key initiatives, such as the digital-print uncoupling and partnerships like the , illustrate Boucher's influence in restructuring for efficiency, though operational execution involves input from divisional leaders and boards. No formal disclosures detail internal protocols beyond standard corporate hierarchies, but the private ownership structure facilitates rapid, centralized responses to market challenges.

Content and Operations

Core Coverage Areas and Formats

Stuff.co.nz delivers news primarily focused on New Zealand affairs, encompassing breaking developments in politics, economy, health, education, and social issues, alongside in-depth reporting on regional matters across the country. Its domestic coverage emphasizes current events impacting , such as government policies, public sector reforms, and community stories, often drawing from a network of local journalists. International news constitutes a secondary pillar, providing updates on global events with relevance to New Zealand audiences, including , trade relations, and major world crises. Sports coverage is prominent, particularly , with dedicated sections for live match reports, player profiles, and analysis across codes like , , and football; business reporting covers markets, corporate earnings, and economic indicators, while , , , and sections address consumer interests in , , trends, and . Key topic areas receive specialized attention from experienced editors, including climate change impacts, which integrate environmental reporting into broader narratives. Content formats center on digital-first text articles, ranging from concise updates to longform investigative pieces and opinion columns. Multimedia elements enhance delivery, incorporating embedded videos for event and interviews, interactive graphics for data visualization, and immersive visual storytelling tools for complex topics like environmental changes or historical events. The platform supports mobile-optimized reading, newsletters for curated updates, and occasional podcasts or audio clips tied to major stories, prioritizing and user engagement across devices.

Specialized Initiatives like Stuff Circuit

Stuff Circuit is Stuff's dedicated unit for producing longform, video-led investigative documentaries, focusing on in-depth reporting into social, political, and issues. Launched in 2019, the initiative emphasizes multimedia storytelling to amplify underreported stories, often involving extended fieldwork and with external funders. The series has been primarily supported by grants from NZ On Air, a public broadcaster funding body, enabling resource-intensive projects beyond standard newsroom operations. For instance, in 2022, NZ On Air allocated $243,607 to Stuff Circuit for ongoing productions. Earlier rounds, such as in 2020, funded additional episodes following initial successes like Voyager Media Awards recognition for documentary work. This funding model allowed the unit to tackle complex investigations, including (2018), which exposed modern-day slavery in Pacific tuna fisheries, and "Deleted" (2021), detailing business and political ties to a Chinese firm linked to Uyghur abuses. Notable outputs include "" (June 2024), a two-year probe into decades-long Chinese Communist Party influence and interference in politics and society, revealing patterns of unabated operations despite government awareness. Other projects addressed domestic failures, such as "Forsaken" (2022) on 's mismanagement of , linking it to child welfare crises, and "Disordered," examining related systemic shortcomings in health and justice systems. These efforts garnered acclaim for giving voice to marginalized groups but drew scrutiny for amid Stuff's broader financial pressures. By late 2023, Stuff Circuit faced challenges, including denial of NZ On Air funding in the annual round, which contributed to the unit's effective disbandment in early 2024. A multi-year final investigation into financial scams, led by journalist Paula Penfold, remains unpublished amid internal debates over editorial risks and commercial viability, marking the initiative's conclusion despite its contributions to investigative depth in media.

Digital Innovations and Platform Updates

In January 2024, Stuff.co.nz underwent a comprehensive replatforming following a two-year development project, transitioning to a modern technology stack designed to enhance speed, flexibility, and scalability. The update introduced a unified (CMS), streamlined publishing tools, and a flexible platform, replacing an outdated infrastructure that had constrained growth. This overhaul, supported by the Initiative, prioritized through a refreshed aesthetic, faster load times, and improved mobile responsiveness, aligning with audience demands for seamless digital access. The platform redesign extended to Stuff's mobile applications, integrating consistent features across web and app environments to support content delivery, including video and interactive elements. In March 2024, Stuff implemented further refinements based on user feedback, such as enhanced navigation and personalized content recommendations, to refine the interface and boost engagement. These changes contributed to operational efficiencies, enabling quicker content updates and better ad monetization without compromising editorial workflows. By December 2024, Stuff restructured its operations by separating digital and print divisions into distinct businesses, with the digital arm centered on the Stuff.co.nz platform to foster innovation unencumbered by legacy print constraints. This strategic pivot emphasized digital-first strategies, including data-driven personalization and expanded programmatic advertising capabilities, positioning the platform for sustained audience retention amid competitive pressures from and global news aggregators. The updates have been credited with driving measurable performance gains, though ongoing adaptations continue to address evolving user behaviors and technological advancements.

Editorial Practices and Bias

Evolution of Editorial Standards

Prior to its rebranding as Stuff Limited in 2015 from Fairfax New Zealand, the organization's editorial practices emphasized traditional journalistic ethics, including accuracy, fairness, and separation of news from , aligned with broader media norms such as those of the New Zealand Press Council (now Media Council). Fairfax-era guidelines focused on factual reporting without explicit mandates for self-examination of historical biases, though restructurings in 2015 aimed at integrating local and national coverage while maintaining professional standards. During the ownership period from 2018 to 2020, Stuff maintained claims of high editorial integrity, with then-CEO Sinead Boucher testifying in 2018 that professional standards were "as good or better than before," despite ownership transitions and proposed mergers that raised concerns about potential consolidation effects on . No major formal overhauls were documented, but the saw preparatory shifts toward digital-first operations, preserving adherence to Media Council principles without introducing specialized units. The 2020 acquisition by Boucher marked a pivotal , with of an explicit editorial charter affirming independence from commercial or ownership influences and prioritizing public-interest journalism. This period introduced self-reflective initiatives, including the "Our Truth, Tā Mātou Pono" series in November 2020, which concluded that Stuff's historical coverage of issues exhibited systemic racism, prompting a public apology and commitments to principles of partnership, participation, and protection—principles advocated internally by staff but criticized by external observers as embedding ideological priors over neutral standards. Concurrently, Stuff launched "The Whole Truth" in 2020 as an election-year project, later expanded to counter on topics like , earning awards for while facing accusations of selective application from political figures. By November 2023, Stuff formalized its Editorial Code of Practice and , mandating journalists avoid opinion pieces to mitigate perceptions and requiring adherence to Media Council standards on accuracy, , and corrections. Restructurings in 2023 further centralized editorial roles, aiming to enhance investigative depth via units like Stuff Circuit, though these changes coincided with broader critiques of declining objectivity amid staff-driven policy shifts. Overall, the evolution reflects a transition from conventional to proactive audits and thematic commitments, with verifiable improvements in transparency mechanisms but ongoing debates over whether such integrations compromise first-principles neutrality.

Assessments of Political Leanings and Factuality

Assessments from media bias rating organizations classify Stuff as left-center in its political leanings, citing editorial positions that frequently favor progressive policies on issues such as indigenous rights, climate change, and social equity, while maintaining a commitment to factual sourcing. This rating aligns with analyses observing a gradual leftward shift in Stuff's coverage since its independence in 2020 under Sinead Boucher, contrasting with outlets like the NZ Herald inching rightward amid broader polarization in New Zealand media. Conservative critics, including political parties like New Zealand First, argue that Stuff exhibits a stronger left-wing slant through selective fact-checking and framing that embeds "woke leftist narratives," particularly in critiques of right-leaning policies or figures. Public perceptions, reflected in trust surveys and online reviews, often highlight perceived bias, with complaints of unbalanced reporting on topics like Israel-Palestine coverage or rejection of certain advertisements, contributing to a reported 5% drop in trust levels around 2024. Stuff's editorial code asserts political non-partisanship, requiring journalists to avoid bias or its perception in reporting, and adherence to Media Council principles emphasizing balance and accuracy. However, this self-assessment contrasts with external observations of systemic influences, such as a 2024 study finding 81% of New Zealand journalists self-identifying as left-of-center politically, potentially shaping coverage across outlets including Stuff. Right-leaning commentators and reader feedback on platforms like Trustpilot describe Stuff as having evolved into a "far-left activist site" promoting partisan propaganda over neutral journalism, especially post-2020 initiatives like the "Our Truth" project addressing historical biases against Māori, which some view as prioritizing ideological redress over objective history. On factuality, Stuff receives high marks from bias evaluators for proper sourcing, minimal failed fact checks, and transparency in corrections, with rare instances of retractions tied to specific errors rather than systemic fabrication. Conservative sources challenge this, pointing to alleged distortions in "fact-checking" segments that favor left-leaning interpretations, such as downplaying policy critiques from opposition parties. Broader trust data from 2024 indicates that 82% of distrustful audiences attribute low confidence to perceived and imbalance, though empirical audits of Stuff's output show consistent use of primary sources and data-driven reporting in core areas like and . No major peer-reviewed studies contradict the high factual rating, but ongoing criticisms underscore the challenge of distinguishing factual accuracy from interpretive slant in a media environment where left-leaning institutional norms predominate.

Controversies and Criticisms

Maori Representation and Historical Bias Admissions

In November 2020, Stuff initiated the "Our Truth, Tā Mātou Pono" project, an internal review led by journalist Carmen Parahi and involving approximately 20 other staff members, to examine its coverage of issues spanning 160 years from its earliest newspapers. The investigation analyzed archives, front pages, and reporting patterns, concluding that Stuff's journalism had frequently been biased and racist, contributing to the stigmatization, marginalization, and stereotyping of through a predominantly monocultural lens. Historical examples highlighted in the review included 19th-century articles portraying as an "inferior race" or "bloodthirsty savages," which reinforced colonial narratives without critical scrutiny. More recent coverage was found to overemphasize involvement in social issues like while underreporting systemic factors or achievements, and to neglect diverse viewpoints, often defaulting to a singular perspective aligned with government or majority views. The project specifically admitted failures in challenging state actions perceived as discriminatory, such as the 2007 Urewera police raids, where perspectives were sidelined in favor of official narratives. On November 30, 2020, Stuff published a formal apology titled "Nō mātou te hē - We are sorry," explicitly acknowledging that its reporting had divided New Zealand into "us and them" by privileging non-Māori viewpoints and failing to represent Māori fairly over three centuries. The apology committed to structural changes, including the creation of the Pou Tiaki editorial team and section dedicated to Māori-led storytelling, increased Māori staff representation in newsrooms, and ongoing training to address implicit biases in coverage. While praised by some Māori leaders as a "monumental" step toward accountability, academics and commentators expressed reservations about the apology's potential for sustained reform, citing persistent underrepresentation of Māori journalists in senior roles at the time (approximately 5-7% of staff despite Māori comprising 17% of New Zealand's population).

Broader Accusations of Ideological Slant

Critics from conservative political circles and media analysts have accused Stuff of exhibiting a left-center ideological slant, particularly in its editorial endorsements and framing of policy debates. For instance, in June 2023, the party condemned a column by Vance as demonstrating "blatant " through selective narrative emphasis that overlooked key political contexts and favored opposition viewpoints. Independent bias assessments, such as that from , classify Stuff as left-center biased due to consistent editorial positions supporting progressive policies on issues like and , while maintaining high factual accuracy through proper sourcing. Former Mediaworks news executive Hal Crawford observed in 2021 that Stuff had been "gradually moving left" in its coverage, diverging from prior centrist aspirations amid a broader polarization in media, where outlets increasingly cater to ideological niches rather than broad audiences. This perception aligns with public distrust trends, where a 2024 survey indicated that 82% of those avoiding cited and imbalance as primary reasons, often linking it to perceived progressive leanings in mainstream outlets like Stuff. Such accusations are contextualized by surveys revealing that approximately 81% of New Zealand journalists self-identify as left-of-center politically, a demographic skew that critics argue fosters systemic framing favoring left-leaning interpretations over neutral . Despite these claims, Stuff executives have countered that the outlet strives for neutrality, with chief executive Joanna Norris citing a 2023 Curia poll where Stuff ranked as the most neutral among mainstream media in public perception of political coverage. However, conservative commentators dismiss such self-assessments, pointing to examples like disproportionate emphasis on anti-mandate critiques during coverage as evidence of selective ideological filtering rather than balanced reporting. Overall, while Stuff's factual reporting remains robust, the broader accusations highlight tensions between its operational choices and demands for ideological equidistance in a polarized media environment.

Achievements and Impact

Awards, Audience Metrics, and Market Dominance

Stuff has received multiple accolades for its digital journalism, particularly at the annual Voyager Media Awards organized by the New Zealand media industry. In May 2025, Stuff won the Digital News Provider of the Year award for the second consecutive year, along with 11 total prizes, while Editor-in-Chief Keith Lynch was named Editorial Leader of the Year. The previous year, in May 2024, it secured the Best Digital News Site award, recognizing innovations in live and mobile digital news delivery. Internationally, Stuff's paywall replatforming efforts earned a business transformation prize from the International News Media Association in April 2024. Earlier wins include 21 prizes at the 2022 Voyager Media Awards, highlighting investigative work by teams like Stuff Circuit. Audience metrics demonstrate Stuff's strong digital reach, with stuff.co.nz consistently attracting over 2 million unique visitors monthly. In September 2025, it recorded 2,295,000 unique visitors, marking a 3.6% year-on-year increase and surpassing its nearest competitor by more than 425,000 users. Nielsen data for 2025 showed 2,347,000 unique visitors, 522,000 ahead of the runner-up, contributing to a first-quarter surge. Over the six months prior to September 2025, stuff.co.nz maintained an average lead of over 340,000 unique visitors per month compared to competitors. Globally, ranked it as 's top and media publisher site in September 2025, at position 2,252 worldwide. In the New Zealand news market, Stuff holds dominant position across digital and print platforms, reaching approximately 3.4 million unique Kiwis monthly as of September 2025, per Nielsen readership surveys. This encompasses stuff.co.nz as the leading digital news site and masthead publications, solidifying its top share in the newspaper publishing industry. The platform's audience has sustained this lead through periods of market flux, with combined digital-print reach reported at similar levels in 2023 and 2022.

Contributions to New Zealand Journalism

Stuff has advanced New Zealand journalism through its dominance in digital news dissemination, capturing a monthly audience of 3.3 million readers as measured from late 2023 to September 2024. This reach supports extensive coverage, with over 56,000 stories published in the same period, fostering public discourse on national issues. Investigative reporting by Stuff has driven tangible policy and institutional changes. In June 2025, an exposé on a secret police interrogation technique employing extreme psychological manipulation revealed false confessions and elicited damning judicial commentary, leading to multiple internal reviews and the tactic's ultimate abandonment. Earlier, Stuff Circuit's June 2024 documentary detailed decades of Chinese foreign interference in , contributing to heightened awareness of vulnerabilities. Such work has reportedly prompted law reforms, crime resolutions, and for powerful entities, as aggregated in Stuff's coverage of over a million stories since . Technological innovations further exemplify Stuff's contributions. The Democracy.AI tool, utilizing to generate localized reporting, secured the Best Use of AI award at the International News Media Association in June 2025 and a global prize from IAB . These efforts align with Stuff's recognition as Digital News Provider of the Year and its group securing 11 prizes at the 2025 Voyager Media Awards, affirming leadership in evolving journalistic standards.

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