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April 24, 2024

Newsy’s Mobile + Video + Social + Curation Model Stands Out

First published at Outsell, Aug. 5, 2011

Important Details: Newsy is an unusual project. It’s a for-profit enterprise, housed at a university. It’s an aggregation product in the largely single-title environment of the tablet.  And it’s a digital product that is tablet first, smartphone second and, the web, a distant third.

Newsy now produces 25 to 30 video stories each day, seven days a week, on an 18-hour cycle. Its stories are unusual. They run two and a half to four minutes in length, anchored by a staffers. Newsy benefits from the its partnership with the UniEssentially, they are summaries of the day’s news, drawing from both video (NBCCNNFox NewsBBC and more) and text (newspapers) sources. The sources are prominently featured, in short video clips and paragraphs displayed behind the speaking anchor.

Usage of clips is covered by Fair Use law, just as text aggregators, such as Google, built their businesses, says Spencer.

President Jim Spencer, a veteran of MSNBC and AskJeeves, moved his fledgling operation to Columbia, Mo, home of the University of Missouri, receiving economic development incentives from the City of Columbia (REDI) and substantial tax credits from the Missouri State Department of Economic Development.  Newsy benefits from its partnership with the literally across-the-street University of Missouri, providing hands-on instruction to students and then hiring the cream of each year’s crop. He credits the lower-cost location and enthusiasm of the student/University community with helping to rapid growing the business.

“They [the students] intrinsically get it,” Spencer told Outsell, talking about their grasping of the new product form. “They’ll stay up two days in a row working on an initiative.” On the development path: personalization in various forms, and new Mandarin- and Spanish-language versions.

Key to Newsy’s strategy is the engagement mobile news providers are finding with delivery to the new tablet devices. On its iPad product, Newsy has found that more than 45% of sessions are greater than three minutes in length, with 15% of all sessions being greater than 10 minutes. Shorter sessions are conducted on the iPhone, consistent with most publisher experiences: Newsy is finding users generally spend one to three minutes, and watch fewer videos (2.3 videos “initialized” compared to 3.4 for the iPad user). Median session length on the iPhone app is around 150 seconds, says Spencer. All those numbers compare favorably with industry online usage.

The two-and-a-half-year-old Newsy now employs 18 full-time and 12-15 part-time staffers. It is expanding its advertising presence, using 15-second pre-rolls and bottom of the page banners as  its main business model, with others in the offing.

Implications: Outsell believes the Newsy model in and of itself is of great consequence to news creators. It’s an intriguing tablet native product that manages to grab a hold of much of what makes the new platform such a mind-boggling reader and advertising opportunity.

It’s a plus product, as in: Mobile + Video + Social + Curation, all on the foundation of News. On the tablet, these factors aren’t separate from each other; in fact, the confluence of them is, in part, what gives the tablet platform its game-changing power. It’s not just news publishers, or broadcasters, who can take note. All producers of information can learn lots from taking a look at the Newsy product and business model.

As Spencer notes, it’s the tablet that is the center of his business, because of its unique capabilities; mobile accounts for 70-80% of the traffic. The web, meaning desktop and laptop? “I publish to the the web as the platform of last resort.” That’s a mind-turning idea, and one that legacy companies can think through, tossing print into that “what’s your best platform for this product?” question.

The whole question of aggregation products for the tablet is a work-in-progress. While Google, Yahoo!AOLand MSN have dominated the online space, the single brand-encouraging interface of the iPad has transformed the picture — for now. We see services such as Flipboard and Pulse out early with curation/aggregation products, but the big guys aren’t yet well represented. At the same time, both newspaper and magazine publishers (think Next Issue Media) are trying to figure out if industry aggregation plays, long discarded for online, may be resuscitated. Newsy, then, gives those companies and industries something to think about, and in its get-it-done, get-into-the-market-cheaply momentum, a model from which to learn.


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