Houston Chronicle

Broader ‘Voice’: NBC hopes Snapchat deal appeals to younger viewers

- By Yvonne Villarreal and Paresh Dave LOS ANGELES TIMES

Forget pop stars in spinning chairs. NBC will find out if swiping thumbs can help boost the network’s reach among young viewers.

On Monday, NBCUnivers­al teamed up with Snapchat, the photo-messaging app, by providing mini TV series that are offshoots of its establishe­d properties.

The rollout begins with “The Voice on Snapchat,” a five-part series in which this season’s coaches — Alicia Keys, Miley Cyrus, Adam Levine and Blake Shelton — judge user-submitted videos, with winners potentiall­y appearing on the Sept. 19 broadcast premiere of the reality competitio­n’s 11th season.

The partnershi­p between Comcastown­ed NBCUnivers­al and Snapchat Inc. not only underscore­s the photo-based messaging app’s ambitions to grow beyond a communicat­ion platform into a viable entertainm­ent destinatio­n but also highlights Hollywood’s race to seize the attention of young viewers who would rather surf apps than TV channels.

The company has been in talks for months with TV networks and studios about producing original series for its Discover section, a coveted area on the app where more than 100 million people worldwide each month interact with articles and videos from ad-supported publishers such as People, BuzzFeed and the Wall Street Journal.

The largely text-based stories now will share the stage with more TVlike programmin­g. The deal with NBCUnivers­al allows Snapchat to get high-quality content from establishe­d brands, accelerati­ng the firm toward a $1 billion revenue goal for next year. The studio benefits from being invited to sit at the lunch table alongside Snapchat’s users, who include more than 60 percent of U.S. smartphone users younger than 35.

Ron Lamprecht, executive vice president of business developmen­t and digital distributi­on at NBCUnivers­al, said traditiona­l media companies are struggling to reach younger viewers.

“(Snapchat) is a very young platform, but it’s got massive usage, massive growth,” Lamprecht said. “It’s just logical for us to want to partner with them in a big way.”

NBC isn’t the first media company to get into business with Snapchat. The platform already carries content from Viacom’s Comedy Central and MTV. And other TV companies, including Turner Broadcasti­ng, are exploring new ways to partner with the platform to expose their programmin­g to an important group that is less inclined to watch TV the old-fashioned way.

Snapchat is how those people stay informed and entertaine­d, said Melanie Shreffler, senior insights director at the Cassandra Report, a youth-culture research firm. “They just feel more connected with society overall in that medium. That brands want to be able to tap into that just makes sense.”

The media companies have other options. Facebook is handing millions of dollars to top producers in exchange for more videos. Twitter spent $10 million to stream a slate of National Football League games beginning next month. YouTube, Hulu and Amazon.com remain cash-rich buyers, and Apple is said to be in the mix for some programmin­g as well.

With its one-day countdown clock before content vanishes, Snapchat creates a sense of urgency among viewers that benefits media companies — a sentiment that’s increasing­ly rare as clips become easier to pull up on demand online.

But most important, desperate to reach younger viewers, the entertainm­ent world sees Snapchat as one of the most potent social-media platforms — in some cases, even stronger than Facebook — to reach teens and young adults.

Snapchat described the arrival of more single-narrative videos, versus the multistory­line emphasis of existing Discover channels, as a natural extension of its service. Well-known TV shows bring establishe­d audiences who are used to seeing ads before clips, and the series allow the possibilit­y of deeper, longer branding deals.

“These shows are something brands are more used to; it’s something that could sway them” to a nascent service they remain hesitant about spending on, said Matt Lang, senior social strategist at digital agency RAIN.

NBC already has been working with Snapchat on a dedicated Olympics channel. But this new deal takes things one step further.

“My hope is six months from now we’ll have a handful of really strong performing intellectu­al properties that’s come out of this new initiative,” NBC’s Lamprecht said. “And if we can create a hit series outside our establishe­d properties, that would be the holy grail. That would be a sign that we’ve really learned how to program for this platform.”

“(Snapchat) is a very young platform, but it’s got massive usage, massive growth. It’s just logical for us to want to partner with them in a big way.” Ron Lamprecht, NBCUnivers­al

 ?? NBCUnivers­al ?? With “The Voice on Snapchat,” coaches Blake Shelton, from left, Miley Cyrus, Alicia Keys and Adam Levine will judge user-submitted videos, with winners potentiall­y appearing on the reality show’s season premiere Sept. 19.
NBCUnivers­al With “The Voice on Snapchat,” coaches Blake Shelton, from left, Miley Cyrus, Alicia Keys and Adam Levine will judge user-submitted videos, with winners potentiall­y appearing on the reality show’s season premiere Sept. 19.

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