Ad buyers skeptical as Snap looks beyond teens for
growth
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[November 29, 2018]
By Sheila Dang
(Reuters) - Snap Inc <SNAP.N> has pinned
its hopes on the over-35 crowd to revive user growth for its photo
messaging app, a shift ad buyers said could backfire.
Wooing older people to Snapchat, known for disappearing messages and
cartoon selfie photo filters, could alienate its cult following of
youngsters, ad buyers and other executives warned. Companies hoping to
target young users may in turn move their ad dollars elsewhere, denting
money-losing Snap's primary revenue source.
Look no further than Facebook Inc <FB.O>, warns Jenny Lang, senior vice
president of integrated investment at full-service ad agency UM
Worldwide, which counts Coca-Cola and Sony as clients. The social media
platform has lost younger users in recent years while gaining older
fans.
"I hope they don't change too many things around; that's a fear in your
head," Lang said about Snap, adding that younger audiences are harder to
reach for advertisers as more apps compete for their time. In August,
research firm eMarketer estimated Facebook will lose 2.2 million users
between 12 and 17 by 2022, though Facebook's 1.49 billion daily active
users dwarfs Snapchat's 186 million.
Pressure has mounted on seven-year-old Snap. Two straight quarters of
user losses sent shares down by two-thirds from a February high. Snap
declined to comment on its growth plans and relationships with
advertisers.
Evan Spiegel, Snap's 28-year-old chief executive, first discussed
broadening Snapchat's appeal in late 2017, and called adding users older
than 34 a "marketing and communications challenge" on an October
earnings call.
A redesign rolled out by February 2018, which made it harder to re-watch
friends' stories and separated those stories from publisher content,
drew condemnation from Snap's base.
Snap has still managed to boost revenue with an easy to use self-serve
ad platform. It is also hoping to gain more younger users outside the
United States by fixing its glitchy Android app.
But several in the ad industry said it now risks losing millennials to
upstarts like short-form video app TikTok, which does not have paid ad
spots, or rivals like Facebook's Instagram.
There are signs Snap is luring some older users. The website for AARP, a
senior citizen advocacy group, reported in February some were turning to
Snapchat to flirt and hide affairs.
Even so, gaining wide adoption could be hard given Snap's youth appeal,
critics of the strategy said. Fifteen percent of Snap users were over 35
at the time of its initial public offering in 2017.
Parents could be convinced to use Snapchat because it is their kids'
preferred messaging app, and more intuitive navigation could help, said
one person familiar with Snap's plans. Another area needing improvement
is the content side of the app, the person said.
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A man takes a photograph of the front of the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) with a Snap Inc. logo hung on the front of it shortly before
the company's IPO in New York, U.S., March 2, 2017. REUTERS/Lucas
Jackson
Snapchat's original design reflected a keen understanding of younger
users, ad executives said. For instance, parents cannot easily embarrass
their children by tagging them in photos.
"Snap has a special place where teens felt more comfortable, and that
has helped them grow in the U.S," said Richard Guest, global digital
officer at creative ad agency DDB Worldwide, who developed Snapchat ads
for various Mars Inc brands.
Snap needs to tread carefully, said Issa Sawabini, partner at Fuse
Marketing, which has created Snapchat ads for Amazon and Starbucks.
"Maybe you don't want to be on the same platform as your parents," he
said.
Teens were loyal to Snapchat as Instagram introduced copycat features
over the past two years, noted digital and social media strategist
Jackie Hernandez at full-service ad agency The Community, who counts
Verizon and YouTube as clients.
Snap should focus on its "bread and butter" demographic, she said.
CONTENT CHALLENGES
Snap has spent to distinguish itself from rivals with Discover,
featuring original scripted shows and content from publishers like The
Washington Post alongside "influencers" - people with large social media
followings.
Advertisers targeting an older audience may be uncomfortable placing
brands next to that content if it is all housed in one place.
Snap has struggled to translate user data into suggested content, and is
considering separate Discover versions for kids and adults, the person
familiar with Snap's plans said.
Richard Greenfield, media analyst at BTIG Research, has slammed
Discover's layout in research notes, noting more traditional sources
appear alongside scantily clad influencers.
Snapchat's Stories - videos or photos that disappear after viewing -
attract teens and millennials used to constantly sharing with friends,
but can turn off an older audience, said Ryan Pitylak, chief executive
of ad agency Unique Influence, a subsidiary of advertising holding
company MDC Partners, which has worked with mobile video game company
Ludia on Snapchat.
"If they change the functionality too much, that's when I think you'd
have the problem of losing younger users," Pitylak said.
(Reporting by Sheila Dang; Editing by Kenneth Li and Meredith Mazzilli)
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