Spiegel Online has a 10-person Snapchat Discover team

Snapchat Discover is just two weeks old in Germany, but publisher Spiegel Online is betting big on the platform to reach the app’s coveted young audience.

Spiegel Online, one of Germany’s largest news publishers and one of the Discover launch partners (along with Bild, Sky Sport and Vice), dedicated 10 people with text, video and motion design backgrounds to create a daily Discover edition, drawing from other parts of the company and new hires.

Ten people is a big investment for the company, especially given Snapchat is new and therefore relatively unproven in the German market. But while Spiegel Online has 18.3 million monthly online users (source: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Online Forschung, Germany’s equivalent to comScore), it struggles to reach the young audience that are Snapchat’s core users.

“Our reach of the 14- to 18-year-old audience is poor, so this is really a chance to translate the kind of content we do in a more visual way and reach a completely new audience,” said Torsten Beeck, head of social media at Spiegel Online.

Spiegel Online’s Discover team is still testing what kind of content works best on Discover, but it has focused on original content around hard news topics like politics, internet culture and business.

“There will be no entertainment. We believe there is a younger audience very interested in hard news,” said Beeck.

Snapchat has 53 million daily users across Europe, but it only breaks out figures for the U.K., where it claims to have 10 million daily users. In France, sources say there are 8 million daily users. When pitching to prospective Discover launch partners in Germany, Snapchat described how Discover has fared in France and projected how it would perform in Germany.

Spiegel Online’s plan is to give Discover six months, monitoring who’s reading the edition and for how long, then reassess whether it can justify continuing. If it can reach a seven-figure audience in that time, continuing will be a no-brainer. Beeck acknowledged that the venture is a risky one, though.

“We are not sure if we can make money from the advertising after half a year, but we will try it because we like the platform, and we believe we will find a way to reach a younger audience there,” said Beeck. “The worst case scenario is that we will learn a lot about users on a mobile platform, but I am confident this will work on both reach and later monetization.”

https://digiday.com/?p=235331

More in Media

Media Briefing: Publishers search for new ways to grow (and authenticate) audiences, overheard at the Digiday Publishing Summit

“[Advertisers] already pay data providers for data. So why not pay the publisher?”

Research Briefing: Publishers’ revenue sources are top of mind at Digiday Publishing Summit

In this week’s Digiday+ Research Briefing, we examine which revenue streams were top of mind for publishers at the Digiday Publishing Summit, how TikTok is getting even more marketing spend from brands and retailers despite facing a potential U.S. ban, and how Disney is rolling out DRAX Direct, a direct integration with the industry’s largest DSPs, as seen in recent data from Digiday+ Research.

How Forbes is testing its SSPs to improve programmatic ad revenue

Forbes has been running tests with its SSPs to improve the ad tech firms’ contributions to the publisher’s revenue.