College students are auditory eroticismgetting more Snap in their lives this fall.
Snapchat is releasing Campus Publisher Stories, where college newspapers will be creating content exclusively for the messaging app that was popularized by students back in 2013. These weekly editions will only be available on Snapchat Discover within the school's district and will feature ads.
SEE ALSO: The video chat app that should scare the hell out of Facebook and SnapchatFour newspapers—The Daily Californian (Berkeley), The Battalion (Texas A&M), The Daily Orange (Syracuse), and The Badger Herald (UW Madison)—are launching their first editions Friday. More publications will be added over the coming months.
The initiative brings a new revenue source to college newspapers and offers participants new media experience. According to Snap's blog, they see themselves as helping train the next generation of journalists. For years, Snapchat has offered Campus Stories, a collection of user submitted photos and videos, but these editions will be created by students themselves and serve as digital newspapers.
"School newspapers play a critical role in informing and entertaining their campus communities, and they are often where the many leading journalists and editors that we work with got their start," Snap wrote in a blog post.
For Snapchat, Campus Publisher Stories provides another way to entertain their youth audience and a reason for them to explore Discover, Snap's network of media outlets including CNN, Cosmopolitan, and Mashable. As Facebook and Instagram copy Snapchat's core product Stories, Discover offers original content not found elsewhere.
Young people are increasingly access the news from places like Snapchat Discover. Usage increased from 17 percent to 29 percent over the past year, according to a recent report from Pew Research Center. The users who find news on Snapchat are for the most part younger with 82 percent between 18 and 29 years old, according to Pew.
Snap also commissioned their own study through ORC International focused on college students news consumption habits and found that 47 percent of students say their college newspaper is the primary way they learn about campus events.
The study also found that 70 percent of students surveyed read official news sources, like a college newspaper, weekly.
Snap released Discover in January 2015 and has grown it from a handful of outlets to a network of dozens of publications all over the world that are bringing in significant revenues. While its first partners were mostly digital media companies, it has added more magazines like GQand newspapers like The New York Times. Over the last year, Discover has also added more TV-like content as networks like NBC and CNN create daily news shows.
Building Discover won't be easy for college students. The partnerships requires significant resources since the content is quite different from their other work. Snap typically works very closely with publishers to help them succeed. By offering an ad revenue split, it also encourages both teams to do well.
Topics Instagram Snapchat Social Media
Christian bakers lose 'gay cake' appealSome people think this could be Larry Page's flying carPostcard delivered 50 years late reunites old school buddiesAngry Justin Bieber throws down mic, storms off stage during concertA proud Eric Trump poses with woman in a 'Latinas contra Trump' TA proud Eric Trump poses with woman in a 'Latinas contra Trump' TMichelle Obama and Hillary Clinton are finally rallying togetherThe Walking Dead's latest death prompts fans to quit watchingAir India sets record with world's longest nonPortrait mode on the iPhone 7 Plus will take your Instagrams to the next levelCubs fans are getting very emotional over their team's historic World Series tripThis is the new spaceship that will take humans back to the moonKaty Perry, John Mayer and Taylor Swift all attended Drake's birthday partyThe roast dinner burger is here and it's so wrong it's right5 storylines to follow during the 2016 World Series'Westworld' episode 4 hints at how the story will endThe New York Times just bought a tech review websiteThe best and worst iPods from the last 15 yearsCubs fans are getting very emotional over their team's historic World Series tripGoogle's Pixel smartphones go on sale in India tomorrow Staff Picks: Bars, Balzac, and Buses by The Paris Review Sheri Benning’s “Winter Sleep” by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Raisins, Rhythm, and Reality by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Maps, Marvels, and Madmen – The Paris Review A Message from the Board of Directors by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Viruses, Villages, and Vikings by The Paris Review Lee Krasner’s Elegant Destructions by The Paris Review Isn’t That So by Friederike Mayröcker The Art of the Cover Letter by A Announcing The Winners of the 2016 Whiting Awards Oh, Heaven by Eloghosa Osunde What Is There to Celebrate? An Interview with Hanif Abdurraqib by Langa Chinyoka The Trouble with Charlotte Perkins Gilman by Halle Butler Cooking with Andrea Camilleri by Valerie Stivers Redux: Her Perfume, Hermit Stopping the Void Memoir of a Born Polemicist by Vivian Gornick Whiting Awards 2021: Xandria Phillips, Poetry Staff Picks: Rivers, Rituals, and Rainy Days by The Paris Review Poets on Couches: Carrie Fountain Reads Maya C. Popa by Carrie Fountain
0.9204s , 10196.6796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【auditory eroticism】,Defense Information Network