The Jerusalem Post

Award-winning Israeli storytelli­ng platform will captivate you

Playbuzz seduces viewers to spend much more time on its webpages

- • By MAX SCHINDLER

You’ll likely spend 15 seconds or less skimming this article.

But by uploading video, polls and a millennial flair for image GIFs, Israeli start-up Playbuzz claims it coaxes readers into staying on a webpage for two to four minutes on average, unheard of in the digital publishing industry.

“If you only skip through and you maybe got the headline, you won’t share it [on social media],” said Yael Shafrir, Playbuzz’s vice president for internatio­nal partnershi­ps. “But if you really understood what we’re talking about, you’ve also voted your opinion on it, then you will tend to share it, and then we believe that it will create a better understand­ing of reality. Of course, this will also generate more revenue, and it generates a vision of a better world.”

As an Israeli start-up success story, the Tel Aviv-based digital storytelli­ng platform raised some $35 million last month in a consortium led by Viola Growth fund and joined by Disney. A number of other Fortune 500 companies use Playbuzz’s platform, including news and video sites such as Netflix, Fox, NBC, ESPN, ABC and Huffington Post. Some 13,000 publishers and brands use Playbuzz’s platform, and the company garners more than one billion page views per month.

Playbuzz, which shared a Digiday Award with the Huffington Post for their post-Brexit explanator­y journalism, explains current events issue in an engaging and interactiv­e way – such as by letting the viewer click on a graphic image of a terrorist attack or choosing to keep it hidden. In these ways, the company seduces users into spending more time hunched over their smartphone­s. Such persuasive power portends responsibi­lity.

Many of the company’s clients don’t necessaril­y offer hard news but rather, sports news, celebrity gossip and product advertisin­g. Company executives demurred when asked if Playbuzz was contributi­ng to an epidemic of smartphone addiction.

“People are addicted to their screens anyhow,” Shafrir said. “For my 14-year-old daughter, she reads books on a special app on her iPhone. This doesn’t mean that she’s a shallow person. She reads four to five books per month on the smartphone.

“I don’t think we’re addicting people further. People are getting addicted if they want to, or if they’re bound to. At Playbuzz, we allow people to further enrich their content-consumptio­n experience. It allows the publishers’ readers to get more loyal. We’re just a tool.”

The ongoing race by everyone from advertiser­s to news outlets to capture your eyeballs and steal your time may be inevitable. With newspapers facing a dire collapse in advertisin­g revenue – from classified­s migrating to Craigslist, coupled with Google and Facebook hogging revenue – video, branded content and native advertisin­g could help balance the books and keep the Fourth Estate in business. Branded advertisin­g campaigns launched by Playbuzz manage to penetrate 65% of users on average, while the industry standard lags behind at 24%.

To address privacy concerns, Playbuzz claims it fully anonymizes data while still personaliz­ing and optimizing advertisin­g by collecting that data whenever as user participat­es in a poll or browses the web.

Yet the company also announced it was running an advertisin­g campaign for Clalit, an Israeli HMO, targeting pregnant and expectant mothers. It is likely that Playbuzz is able to isolate such a specific audience by using web search data to pinpoint the demographi­c, but it’s unclear if pregnant women agreed to have their private searches be monetized.

The digital entertainm­ent platform has raised some $66 million to date and employs 160 people worldwide, including 100 who work out of the company’s Sarona Market headquarte­rs in Tel Aviv. Establishe­d in December 2012, Playbuzz’s co-founders are Tom Pachys and Shaul Olmert – the former prime minister’s son.

 ?? (Courtesy Playbuzz) ?? PLAYBUZZ HAS raised some $66 million and employs 160 people worldwide, including 100 at the company’s Sarona Market headquarte­rs in Tel Aviv.
(Courtesy Playbuzz) PLAYBUZZ HAS raised some $66 million and employs 160 people worldwide, including 100 at the company’s Sarona Market headquarte­rs in Tel Aviv.

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