As the year comes to a close, ICFJ+ has announced something big — an initiative that could reshape how independent media survive and grow in an increasingly hostile digital world. The organization, along with Code for Africa (CfA) and PROTO, has officially launched the Plus Hub, a shared services hub designed to give newsrooms access to high-level tools and expert support they simply cannot afford on their own.
Independent media outlets everywhere are facing mounting challenges: shrinking resources, complex technologies, digital threats, and constant pressure. These aren’t just “knowledge gaps.” As ICFJ+ explains, they’re resource gaps — problems that training alone can’t fix. And if nothing changes, many trusted voices may disappear altogether.
The Plus Hub aims to stop that from happening.
Instead of leaving independent journalists to struggle alone, the Hub gives them access to enterprise-grade services in audience development, AI tools, digital safety, forensic investigations, and more. But what makes the Hub different is its “last mile” support — ensuring that organizations don’t just learn new systems but actually build and implement them.
The program is launching with five specialized cohorts: investigative journalists, news creators, exiled media, hyperlocal grassroots outlets, and women-led organizations, especially those facing online harassment and tech-driven gender violence.
The Hub’s services are divided into four powerful layers — foundational, innovational, institutional, and editorial. These range from audience analytics and revenue strategies to digital security, HR systems, and advanced OSINT tools used to track disinformation and investigate corruption.
Participants will go through a structured four-stage journey: access to resources, activation workshops, hands-on implementation, and ongoing hotline support. This ensures that even the smallest newsroom can build strong, reliable, and sustainable systems.
The Plus Hub is backed by the Knight Foundation with a three-year investment and additional support from the Google News Initiative. It builds on decades of innovation from the ICFJ Knight Fellowships, adapting that legacy into a modern, global support network.
According to ICFJ, this shared-services model is designed to protect journalism, strengthen civic information ecosystems, and ensure that communities around the world continue to receive trustworthy, high-quality news.







