Poynter reproting:
... Online readers don’t shy away from long stories, says Mark Armstrong,
founder of Longreads and editorial director of save-for-later service
Pocket. In fact, data, page views and experience
have shown they crave the deep read. And while the source of a story
clearly plays a role, a reader is going to be more concerned with
whether their friend gave it a nod on Facebook than if they saw it on a
prominent publication’s homepage.
“I think people are increasingly agnostic about where exactly they’re
reading something or what print edition it came out in,” says Longform
co-founder Aaron Lammer.
That’s not to say that name recognition and the track record of the
publisher and writer aren’t still important, Armstrong says. They’re
just now part of a greater equation that includes who else is
recommending it and whether the reader trusts that recommender’s taste.
After clicking through a “READ THIS NOW” link on a friend’s Twitter or
Facebook feed, the reader is then more open to what comes next from that
site.
While much has been made about BuzzFeed posting cat photos and
investigative profiles on the same site, Shafrir doesn’t think readers
will be too concerned with the eclectic mix.
“I think people adapt much faster than we give them credit for,”
Shafrir says. “There’s no handwringing of, ‘Should I read this serious,
political story on BuzzFeed? They also have cat videos.’ I don’t think
that’s a consideration point on the part of most readers.”
http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/top-stories/190421/as-longform-finds-a-new-home-at-buzzfeed-perhaps-its-a-good-gateway-drug/
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