One month in: What CNN has learned from Facebook Messenger bots
One month into launching its bot on Facebook Messenger, CNN assess what they learn, finding more initial success on Line’s platform.
CNN was among the first publishers to launch a bot [on Facebook Messenger] in April, which is available to its global audience. CNN currently has a Facebook audience of 21.5 million people, and CNN International has 11.6 million; its bot caters to its entire worldwide audience, and the team that looks after it comes under CNN Digital Worldwide team.
The goal is to widen its international reach by tapping into new audiences around the world, and providing them with more personalized news experiences.
“Messenger apps are ripe for news as they enable that intimacy of a one-to-one conversation, but they’re also a medium to broadcast messages at scale. That’s why it’s so exciting. The big four messaging apps have overtaken the big four social platforms,” said Wellen.
This is what the team has learned so far:
If it bleeds, it leads
It’s been live less than a month, so the publisher doesn’t have a lot of concrete data it’s willing to share on how many people have been interacting with the bots. What it does know is that specific topics: politics, social matters like race-focused stories and conflict stories, resonate the most. People are also spending an average two minutes with the bot. “We’re learning and trying to take in as much feedback from the user as possible, because it’s crucial to have the right balance. Nothing is more important than deciding how frequent the messaging is, as it’s very personal,” said Wellen.
Two-minute dwell times means people are at least looking at the headlines and reading some of the stories. Wellen added that a good percentage — “double digits” — has asked the bot questions, either in full sentences or using keywords. Some of the most popular stories have related to Trump and Clinton, and also London’s new Mayor Sadiq Khan, who’s had regular public spats with Trump, he said.
Location, location, location
CNN’s domestic and international stories have been running through Messenger, though it hasn’t yet geo-targeted the information yet. It plans to segment the audiences for Messenger on a country-by-country basis. It will build out the meta-data on all CNN’s content worldwide and then work with tech partners, as well as develop its own solutions, to develop its algorithms, artificial intelligence, and ability to do semantic analysis of natural language ...
Facebook remains in back of Line
Of course, Facebook Messenger isn’t the only exciting distribution app in town. Japanese messaging app Line has become an attractive new distribution tool for publishers, as has U.S. messaging app Kik, where CNN is poised to launch on. The Economist and the Wall Street Journal have both set up shop on Line, with the latter accruing 2 million followers making it the fastest-growing platform for the publisher.
Wellen had been eyeballing Line even before CNN launched on the app. “There are so many ways to communicate beyond the simple text, through images or emoji stickers,” he said. “On Line, you can provide a feed but also publish directly to the individual.” CNN launched on Line in April and has had 400,000 downloads. International breaking news and video perform particularly well. “It’s surprised all of us how much of a need there was for news to play in that space. So many people spend their entire day on Line.”
Facebook hasn’t put quite the same marketing power behind promoting Messenger bots as Line has yet, which is partly why there hasn’t been a stampede of publishers jumping on it. For now, discoverability is still tricky for publishers. “Line has been great, though Facebook and Kik have been more like soft launches. That will change, I’m sure,” added Wellen.