A Toxic Love Affair: A History of the Media’s Rocky Relationship with Social Platforms

Startups.com
Startups.com
Published in
5 min readAug 2, 2017

Written by Amit Rathore // Also shared on Startups.co.

The traditional media is stuck in a toxic love affair with social media platforms. Nowadays, 62 percent of adults in the US use social media to get news. At the same time, 50 percent of social media users report having shared news stories, images or videos on their social media feeds, and 46 percent have discussed a news issue or event.

On one hand traditional media companies are struggling to monetize, as readers flock to social media and other new digital media platforms. On the other hand, social media accounts for a huge amount of their traffic and shares, and offers access to younger demographic audience, who have grown up reading media online rather than in print.

In the beginning, news and media sites were quick to jump on the bandwagon of the new tech, wowed by the access they offered to millennial readers. However, over time the rose-tinted mist lifted, and media channels began to realize that this new type of mass communication was going to have a direct effect on their bottom line, becoming a competitor rather than a tool to be taken advantage of.

TRADITIONAL MEDIA VS. SOCIAL MEDIA: HOW DID IT COME TO THIS?

So how did it get to this? We have broken down the relationship into three key stages:

FASCINATION (2006–2012)

With the release of Myspace in 2003, Facebook in 2004, Youtube, Bebo and Reddit in 2005 and Twitter in 2006, suddenly previously unheard of sites became the meeting point for hundreds of millions of millennials around the world, and like pretty much everyone, traditional media organizations were extremely curious about their potential.

When Barack Obama’s inauguration became the first of any US president to be followed on the recently launched Twitter, the British newspaper The Telegraphdescribed the platform as “ Twitter, the microblogging site whose potential for ‘citizen journalism’ and disseminating information at lightning speed has aroused huge excitement on the web.

Over time, the media became one of Twitter’s biggest cheerleaders. The year 2009 was a turning point for the platform, when Oprah Winfrey sent her first tweet, and Ashton Kutcher challenged CNN to see who could be the first to get one million followers. Leading media channels began featuring a Twitter feed on their shows, and encouraging viewers to follow them and engage with tweets.

In 2010, Facebook released social plugins which made it simple for any site to link to the platform by adding a simple line of code, allowing users to ‘like’ news stories, photos or videos, which would then be synced to their Facebook profile. Traditional media companies jumped in with two feet, adopting the like and share buttons on their sites in an attempt to boost readership.

The initial ‘puppy love’ period of the media’s relationship with social channels was effectively a ‘knee jerk’ reaction. Media companies dashed en mass to whether their audience was. At this time, media companies viewed their relationship with social channels as an alliance. But that was soon to change.

FEAR (2012–14)

Pew Research contributors Amy Mitchell and Tom Rosenstiel argue that in 2011, the digital revolution entered a new era as smartphones became a common household item. By 2012, more than four in ten American adults owned a smartphone and one in five owned a tablet. With 24 hour ‘on the move’ connectability, came a much deeper immersion into social platforms.

Unlike rigid traditional media companies, who were slower to adapt to the change, social platforms like Facebook and Twitter put all of their energy into making their apps a must have feature on smartphones. From the beginning of 2010 to the end of 2012, Facebook’s global users more than doubled from less than 400 million to 1 billion users.

Media companies began to realize that rather than providing an additional source of traffic, they had allowed themselves to become totally dependant on audiences clicking off social platforms. All of a sudden 10% of traffic from social media, had turned into 40 or 50%, effectively becoming the lifeblood of their publications. Media companies began to get worried, realizing that if social platforms turned off the faucet and changed their algorithms, they would be in hot water.

Their nightmare soon became reality. Several leading media companies such as the Washington Post and The Guardian, steadily developed a user base of millions on their social-reading apps over the course of 2012, until Facebook threw a wrench in the works by changing its algorithms, and their news essentially disappeared from newsfeeds. The Washington Post app lost more than 50% of its users in just one month, and other media companies like The Guardian and Yahoo suffered catastrophic drops too. Facebook claimed this was for the benefit of users, to protect them from advertising, but in reality it was a means to monetize advertizing, making users pay to boost ads and sponsored content.

And Facebook wasn’t the only platform which started cutting companies off by restricting access to their platforms. Around 2011 and moving into 2012, forums started filling up with complaints from disgruntled developers and early partners of Twitter, who suddenly found their Twitter API based businesses blocked from the platform. The developer community was up in arms at what they saw as Twitter shunning their former community in favor of gaining more advertising revenue, even though the same community had played such a big part in its growth and even invented functions such as @ mentions, direct messages and re-Tweets which have since been adopted by the platform.

Developers, publishers and media companies were no longer under any illusions as to who held the power. Social channels had become ‘frenemies’, but publishers and media companies found themselves further in the pocket of companies over which they had no control.

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