10 ways you can use data like Mashable, Upworthy, BuzzFeed and College Humor
Everyone wants to know the secret to attracting and keeping audiences on their site. BuzzFeed, CollegeHumor, Upworthy and Mashable have gotten a lot of attention for their fast growth, millennial audiences and innovative approach to integrating analytics into their operations.
For these sites, collecting and accessing data is just the beginning; the real power comes from how they each apply it to grow their audiences and to help their organizations’ overall strategies.
We asked four digital media rock stars from each website to share ways they use data as part of a series Parse.ly put together on demystifying data for digital media sites. Each person answered us with a list, because, why not? Here we share their top ten insights.
- Interesting is out, actionable is in
Ed Urgola, Director of Marketing at Upworthy made this point clear: Upworthy doesn’t use analytics for a “pat on the back” and they don’t treat it as something pretty to look at. All of their analytics exist to make help their team take action and improve. - We are all Iron(persons)
- What’s popular with your audience vs. what’s popular with everyone
- Content as a bumper sticker
“Social content is the new bumper sticker” – Ricky Van Veen, co-founder, CollegeHumor
- Resources make you pick the best platforms for your audience
Even CollegeHumor has resource constraints, Van Veen emphasized the need to focus on networks that build distribution and audience, instead of those that might get huge page views but won’t send readers that would come back again or share content. - Use data to see what’s rising quickly
- Go to the readers
- A-B test in real-time, but…
“It may be true that the headline ‘A Shark is About to Attack you right now!’ will have a higher click-through rate, if the story on the other side doesn’t match, your readers aren’t going to come back.” – Summer Anne Burton, Managing Editorial Director, BuzzFeed
- Look at very specific habits
BuzzFeed found that readers weren’t just sharing stories on social networks, they were sharing individual pictures from those stories. This spurred them to start adding headlines, captions and context within their images not just in the article text. - Always keep experimenting
Want to see more about the tips they shared with the audience? Check out the hashtag, #makingdatatalk.