Daily Maverick


Daily Maverick is a South African daily online newspaper founded in 2009 and edited by Branko Brkic and published by Styli Charalambous. It is run by an independent private company. According to the Daily Maverick website, the publication is "a unique blend of news, information, analysis and opinion delivered from our newsroom in Johannesburg, South Africa". Charalambous says the website is also "a platform for photojournalism, providing readers with a visual insight into what is happening in South Africa, Africa and globally".
Contributors include assistant editor Marianne Thamm, free market columnist Ivo Vegter, constitutional law expert Pierre de Vos, founding General Secretary of COSATU Jay Naidoo, activist Sisonke Msimang, and photojournalist Greg Marinovich.
Daily Maverick is part of The Guardian Africa network.

History

The Daily Maverick website was publicly launched late October 2009. Its name and values are derived from that of Maverick, a defunct South African business magazine published and edited by Brkic from 2005 to 2008. It was also influenced by American news websites The Daily Beast and The Huffington Post. Brkic was born in Yugoslavia and came to South Africa in 1991.
Technology entrepreneur Alan Knott-Craig Jnr was Daily Maverick's first investor. He also introduced Brkic to Charalambous. In his book Mobinomics, he says:
Charalambous, a chartered accountant, joined the team a month before the website was launched in 2009. He was born and educated in Port Elizabeth.
Former deputy editor Phillip de Wet, who had been with Daily Maverick since its inception in 2009 and was also the deputy editor of Maverick magazine from 2005 to 2008, left the team late 2011. Associate editor Ranjeni Munusamy began writing for Daily Maverick in April 2012.

Business model

Since inception in 2009, the publication has focused on original content. Content is free for Internet users to access, without a paywall, and is funded via advertising. Its online advertising model features display advertising focused on a single large premium banner ad per page which is separated from editorial content.
As at September 2012, the Daily Maverick team included 20 full-time journalists and editorial support staff and a network of op-ed contributors.
In 2018, the Daily Maverick launched Maverick Insider - a voluntary membership plan that doesn't have a paywall or standard donation request. Instead, contributions from readers will keep the Daily Maverick free for those who can’t afford to pay.
The Daily Maverick hosts articles by Declassified UK, a group of independent journalists who investigate British foreign policy, the UK military and intelligence agencies and Britains most powerful corporations.

Reception

In an early article about the new website, business writer Chantelle Benjamin says it "appears user-friendly, with interesting content" and an "attractive layout".
The Mail & Guardian newspaper describes Daily Maverick as an "independent newspaper", and Mail & Guardian executive editor Tanya Pampalone says "It's part Slate, a bit Daily Beast, with a helping of Huffington Post, but it's all home-grown, serving up local news with fresh angles and international news with insight into why it matters to South Africa".
In 2011 Anton Harber, Caxton Professor of Journalism at Wits University and founding editor of the Mail & Guardian, describes Brkic as "a groundbreaker in South African publishing" and Daily Maverick as "a lively and valuable site, full of opinions and analysis that live up to the site's name and which regularly shows up the dull and predictable publishing that dominates our mainstream". In 2013 he says Daily Maverick "pushes the journalistic boundaries, sometimes with great success and occasionally crossing a line" and describes Daily Maverick as a "shelter for the homeless of journalism, who demand more freedom than they get in the more staid newsrooms".
Media commentator Gill Moodie says "The thoughtful, left-field news and analysis website quickly picked up an audience and became a fixture in our media landscape".
Daily Maverick set the editorial agenda on major news stories in 2012 including the Marikana miners' strike. Herman Manson, editor of media website MarkLives, says "in terms of insight into what's happening at grassroots and political intelligence, they have emerged as a clear front-runner".
Sipho Hlongwane, who was named Best Youngster at the 2012 Bookmarks Awards, described it as "unspeakably white and upper-middle-class" before becoming a Daily Maverick contributor himself. However, former deputy editor Phillip de Wet has described their ideal demographic as "young, black and urban".
In July 2013, the globally syndicated radio show This American Life opened Episode 501: "The View From In Here" with a reading of Richard Poplak's satirical "Open letter to South Africa from foreign media" published in Daily Maverick the previous month.
In November 2013, Bill Keller described Daily Maverick as "feisty" in an op-ed in The New York Times about foreign news coverage.
As at July 2013 the website had exceeded 300,000 unique users per month.

Other ventures

In February 2011, the Daily Maverick team launched online newspaper for the African continent Free African Media, and in June 2011 they launched subscription-based iPad newspaper iMaverick. They also beta launched the Newsfire newswire service, which is a separate business entity, at the ANC National Conference in Mangaung in December 2012.

Awards