We consider the quantum resource theory of measurement informativeness and introduce a weight-based quantifier of informativeness. We show that this quantifier has operational significance from the perspective of quantum state exclusion, by showing that it precisely captures the advantage a measurement provides in minimising the error in this game. We furthermore introduce information theoretic quantities related to exclusion, in particular the notion of excludible information of a quantum channel, and show that for the case of quantum-to-classical channels it is determined precisely by the weight of informativeness. This establishes a three-way correspondence which sits in parallel to the recently discovered correspondence in quantum resource theories between robustness-based quantifiers, discrimination games, and accessible information. We conjecture that the new correspondence between a weight-based quantifier and an exclusion-based task found in this work is a generic correspondence that holds in the context of quantum resource theories.
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