Khaleej Times

Snapchat redesigns mobile app to split friends from media

- Sarah Frier

Snap unveiled a sweeping redesign of its mobile photo-sharing applicatio­n, hoping to lure more users and advertiser­s to revive revenue. After three quarters of disappoint­ing sales since going public earlier this year, the company said a simpler design will encourage people to spend more time using Snapchat, increasing the app’s appeal to advertiser­s over the long term. The main change: separating photos and videos sent to users by their friends from content produced by media companies. Snap touted the move as a philosophi­cal departure from rival Facebook.

“Until now, social media has always mixed photos and videos from your friends with content from publishers and creators,” Snap said in a blog post. “While blurring the lines between profession­al content creators and your friends has been an interestin­g Internet experiment, it has also produced some strange side-effects [like fake news] and made us feel like we have to perform for our friends rather than just express ourselves.”

Chief executive officer Evan Spiegel touted the redesign in the company’s earnings call earlier this month, providing hope that Snap was on the path to fixing its issues, but warning the changes could disrupt growth in the short term.

Spiegel has taken pains since going public to present his strategy as unique and not directly comparable to Facebook, which has seven times as many users and has copied some of Snapchat’s most-popular features. Meanwhile, advertiser­s and investors are using the social media giant as a benchmark for the muchsmalle­r company’s potential.

Snapchat’s new design borrows one important ingredient from Facebook’s strategy: algorithmi­c organisati­on of content.

The redesigned Snapchat app still opens first to a camera. Swipe right, and users can see photo and video messages from their friends, as well as daily public stories friends share, in the same place. Swipe left, and all the content from Snap media partners, such as television networks NBC and ESPN, is mixed with curated event videos and “snaps” from internet celebritie­s.

Snap said it will organise the content based on user behavior. Instead of listing friends in the order of whom a person talked to most recently, like in messaging apps, it will organise them based on how important they are to that person. Snap will draw on similar behaviour cues for the media feed.

The redesigned app will be available to a small percentage of users right away and roll out to everyone “in the coming weeks,” Snap said.

The applicatio­n’s past designs listed friend stories in the same feed alongside content from media partners, but the company kept changing how prominentl­y it displayed those made-for-Snapchat mobile magazines — where it makes much of its revenue from advertisin­g.

Having the news content in a personalis­ed feed may make it more approachab­le, Snap said. Or it could be ignored, if people choose to only use the app to talk to friends.

Organising the content with the use of algorithms also creates the potential for feed ads, a type of advertisin­g familiar to marketers from Facebook and Twitter. The main difference with Snapchat is that its 178 million average daily users won’t be served content based on what their friends like and share. Snapchat posts can’t go viral within the app like those on Facebook. People will see what they like as individual­s, not what’s popular.

“Separating social from media has allowed us to build the best way to communicat­e with friends and the best way to watch great content — while addressing many of the problems that plague the internet today,” Snap said in its blog post. — Bloomberg

While blurring the lines between profession­al content creators and your friends has been an interestin­g Internet experiment, it has also produced some strange side-effects [like fake news]

Snap blog post

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