The Daily Telegraph

BBC to launch Tiktok-style news videos

- By James Warrington

THE BBC is to launch Tiktok-style short-form news videos in an effort to win young audiences.

In its annual plan published yesterday, the corporatio­n said it will develop more “short, easy-to-consume updates” as well as longer in-depth journalism.

The video and audio clips will be distribute­d across the BBC’S news app and website as well as its iplayer and Sounds streaming services. The push into short-form content, which mirrors the format of viral social media app Tiktok, comes as the BBC tries to stem an exodus of young audiences to streaming.

The public service broadcaste­r already offers brief news updates aimed at younger listeners on its Sounds app, such as All the Latest Things , a three-minute update from Radio 1 presenter Greg James. BBC News has built a following of 3.2m on Tiktok itself, where it publishes clips from news bulletins. However, the plans suggest bosses want to create more tailor-made programmin­g for a generation of viewers accustomed to bite-size content.

The BBC said it was aiming to deliver a “compelling news offer for streaming audiences” by expanding beyond its traditiona­l model of written stories.

Bosses did not believe the changes would require approval by Ofcom. The BBC is scrambling to find ways to appeal to younger audiences amid tough competitio­n from streaming services such as Netflix and questions over the future of the licence fee funding model.

Teenagers are now more likely to get their news from Instagram and Tiktok than BBC bulletins, according to Ofcom. Traditiona­l TV viewing suffered its sharpest ever annual decline last year.

Other initiative­s include expanding the BBC’S presence across well-known gaming platforms through flagship shows and presenters.

The corporatio­n is also aiming to unite its various apps and websites into one online service to gather more data from consumers and improve personalis­ation.

Tim Davie, the BBC director general, this week sounded the alarm over the risk to “British storytelli­ng” from foreign-owned social media platforms, warning that algorithms would become the “taste-makers of the future”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom