The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Study: Usage of news apps among young adults low

- By Rebecca Tan

If the little square boxes on our phone screens are candy, then news apps, to young users, are the equivalent of chewy, highfiber granola bars. They’re on the screen, sure, but 18- to 35-yearolds will almost always swipe past them in favor of the more sugary, more seamless social media apps, says a new report from the British-based Reuters Institute and consultanc­y firm Flamingo Group.

If and when these millennial and Gen Z readers click on the apps from the New York Times or The Washington Post, the report adds, it feels more like a chore than a treat.

Researcher­s tracked the phone usage of 20 respondent­s ages 18 to 35 from the United Kingdom and the United States as part of a larger project that surveyed more than 75,000 people on their digital news consumptio­n. Through a two-week qualitativ­e study, they found that respondent­s were spending 350 to 400 minutes, or about six hours a day, on their phones, but often less than 1 percent of that on news apps. No news apps, with the exception of Reddit, broke the top 25 apps used.

So why aren’t younger audiences using news apps?

According to researcher­s, young adults, and particular­ly those raised as “digital natives” as part of Generation Z (ages 18 to 24), have high expectatio­ns for a “flawless, seamless, personaliz­ed online experience” that news organizati­ons are not often able to provide.

This “seamlessne­ss” refers to the user experience of the app — including, for example, the desire for features such as customizab­le news feeds with an endless scroll — but also to how news organizati­ons integrate themselves to platforms such as Instagram or Twitter. Often, said Matt Taylor, a strategist at Flamingo who worked on the report, news organizati­ons struggle with striking the right tone.

“It’s like a person and how he behaves at different social circumstan­ces,” he said. “At the moment, it’s either that this person is behaving similarly in all the places, so they’re not fitting in, or they’re trying way too hard to fit in, sort of like a dad trying to be cool at a party.”

The key, Taylor said, is for news organizati­ons to retain their brand but adapt it across multiple platforms. These instincts are embedded into the way young people use the Internet, which is why they expect it from other individual­s and organizati­ons.

The other challenge for news organizati­ons, researcher­s say, is that for young users, there is a near-constant level of “background” or “indirect” exposure

to news that not only dulls the desire to actively seek out news through dedicated apps but can cause fatigue that drives them to seek out content that is explicitly not news — such as, you know, oddly satisfying “slime porn,” or this video of a leather-clad motorcycli­st in Belgium saving a tiny kitten.

“To be online today is to have these currents constantly hitting you,” said Lucas Galan, head of applied data science at Flamingo. “… Just by osmosis, you can quickly become tired with a story without really engaging with it in depth.”

According to the study, many respondent­s found traditiona­l news organizati­ons “negative and depressing” and “actively looked for more entertaini­ng or uplifting news in social media or aggregator­s.”

Paula M. Poindexter, a communicat­ions professor at the University of Texas at Austin, agreed, adding that based on her research, it is not just that young people are shying away from news apps but also that their general interest in the act of reading the news seems to be waning.

In the past, children used to look at their parents or teachers reading the physical newspaper, which implicitly signaled to them that reading the news is an important part of adult life, she said. Since most American users — not just millennial­s — now get their news from social media and websites rather than the print product, children are growing up looking at adults staring at their phones, with little sense of what applicatio­ns they are actually on. The “modeling” for news consumptio­n that used to be present no longer exists, Poindexter said.

The researcher­s from Flamingo emphasize that their research does not suggest that younger audiences no longer have the appetite or, as frequently alleged by older pundits, the attention span for important journalism. They pointed, for example, to the growing interest among young adults in longer-form stories and podcasts as evidence that there is a “thirst” for deeper engagement with hard-hitting news. It just needs to be delivered on the right terms, they added.

News organizati­ons need to make their apps “as simple and intuitive as Facebook or Netflix,” the report states. They also need to adapt to the platforms that younger users have already integrated into their lives — but without losing the authority of their brand.

Some organizati­ons are already trying to do this: the New York Times launched a weekly documentar­y TV show on Hulu and FX earlier this year and more recently aired the pilot of “Diagnosis,” another documentar­y series on Netflix. The Washington Post runs a TikTok account that, among other highlights, got into faux “beef” with Trevor Noah’s “Daily Show.”

Whether these efforts will pay off remains to be seen. Poindexter said she has been monitoring the news consumptio­n habits of young users for close to a decade and still has not figured out whether active, meaningful engagement with news is evolving or fading altogether.

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