Britain's push to drag the BBC World Service into the digital age hasn't gone quite to plan, with MPs warning the broadcaster's "digital-first" strategy has shrunk audiences rather than growing them.
A report from the UK's Public Accounts Committee says the BBC expected listeners and viewers to migrate online after closing radio and TV services, but the opposite happened. Instead of rising, the World Service's digital audience fell 11 percent to 131 million since 2021.
The drop came as the BBC shut broadcast outlets as part of a broader cost-cutting push. Since 2022, the corporation has run three savings programs aimed at cutting £54.2 million, largely by reducing services and staffing.
Those cuts included closing radio outputs in 13 languages and TV services in six, decisions the BBC estimates directly reduced weekly audiences by around 30 million people. The plan was that many of those listeners and viewers would simply follow the BBC online.
That migration largely failed to materialize.
Some language services that were moved to digital-only distribution saw overall audiences fall 63 percent, while their digital reach also dropped 39 percent. In Nigeria, audiences were hit after social platforms deprioritized news content, further cutting visibility for BBC material.
MPs say the BBC made the shift without clearly defining what success should look like. The broadcasting corp did not set detailed targets for individual language services or track whether audiences that previously relied on broadcast platforms were actually switching to digital ones.
"Without a shared view of what 'good looks like' and timely data, teams could not redirect content and distribution quickly enough to secure audiences online," the committee wrote.
The report also found the BBC failed to properly document key decisions behind the changes. In some cases, it was not possible to clearly reconstruct why particular TV or radio services were closed, making it difficult to assess whether the decisions were consistent or effective.
Despite the audience declines, the World Service remains a large operation, reaching an average of 313 million people each week in English and 42 other languages. But MPs say the BBC must improve how it manages its digital transition if it wants to maintain that reach in the future.
The findings come as the BBC faces continued financial pressure. Funding for the World Service has fallen 21 percent in real terms since 2021–22, forcing the broadcaster to make savings while trying to modernize the service.
Those pressures extend across the wider corporation. Earlier this year, the UK government confirmed the annual TV licence fee will rise to £180 from April 2026, up from £174.50 under the inflation-linked settlement that runs until the BBC's current Royal Charter expires in 2027.
However, for MPs examining the World Service, the bigger concern is that the BBC attempted to switch before its digital strategy was ready.
The committee warned that unless the broadcaster improves how it tracks audiences and manages the transition, the shift online could continue to shrink one of Britain's most prominent international media operations rather than futureproof it. ®
Source: The register