Reddit Is Bringing Promoted Posts To Its Mobile Apps (marketingland.com) 43
Reddit is reportedly launching native promoted posts for its mobile apps. "The company said in an email to advertisers that its apps are the most popular way its 330 million monthly active users access Reddit content on mobile, and they now account for 41 percent of time spent on Reddit across all platforms," reports Marketing Land. "Logged-in app users also spend 30 percent more time per day than users who log in from desktop, and 80 percent of app users don't access Reddit on desktop, according to the company." From the report: In-app promoted posts will have all the elements of a standard Reddit post, including upvotes, downvotes and comment threads. The native mobile ads will also include comments, which was not possible before on the mobile ads. Native promoted posts will be available on iOS starting Monday, March 19, and will roll out to Android in the coming weeks.
good plan? (Score:1)
Sounds like a good reason not to use the app.
'Sponsored' posts are always a death knell (Score:1)
Reddit was fun while it lasted.
Re: (Score:2)
Knowing Reddit, any comments badmouthing the sponsored posts will also quickly be down voted to a -20 rating, or whatever else it takes to make the post disappear from the main page.
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It seems that any medium that people find useful for communication will eventually be dominated by spam. It's too easy to produce relative to useful content.
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Reddit needs love ... (Score:2)
... too, but it needs to buy more than that.
Don't Update (Score:2)
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why use the app? oh right they INCESSENTLY harrass you to install it by multiple prompts CONSTANTLY.
They do? I have an account on there and have posted stuff and I have never seen a single thing like that. I didn't even know there was a "reddit app".
(And why would anyone use it, when you could just use the website and not make yourself vulnerable to whatever the hell the app wants to do to/with/against your device?)
It started a week or two ago. PC, If you don't log-in, your asked to at every move. At the bottom of the request is: "skip for now", so it's going in that direction.
Mobile, the app is almost thrust on you, and I still haven't used it, and will leave rather than.
Lot of posts about reddit lately (Score:1)
Reminder that small niche Reddit subs pull more traffic than all of Slashdot.
Reminder that single threads in the larger subs pull more traffic than all of Slashdot.
Over/Under (Score:3)
How long, do you think, before the "downvote" option is removed from these ads?
I give it 10 days.
Re: (Score:1)
Probably not before the ability to comment on the ads is removed. Who the hell thought that was a good idea?! I mean, its one thing to think "It'll be fine if a competitor comments, it'll make them look scared or weak to consumers" but Jeebus H Motherlovin Keerist Reddit is literally the second home of the Troll Nation after 4Chan.
This is like intentionally hiring pedophiles to teach at your new elementary school and advertising the fact you did so. Everyone sees the disaster coming and yet somehow you stil
Smart people code around ads (Score:2)
The more a big brand attempts to make a user do something the more fun it becomes to return the GUI to the real device owner.
Half the posts in some subs are already BS (Score:2)
Like convince me to buy an iphone or some other phone or game or whatever else
Unintended consequences. (Score:2)
In-app promoted posts will have all the elements of a standard Reddit post, including upvotes, downvotes and comment threads.
They had those on desktop for a while. It never goes the way the advertiser intends to and so they shut off comments and voting.
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It was damn fun fucking with them while it lasted though.
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Worked well for Digg
Think that should be Digg 4.0 worked very well for Reddit.com
How is this a problem? (Score:2)
As long as the ads aren't obtrusive, I don't see this as a bad thing. The site needs to pay its staff and for server time.
Just use an unofficial app (Score:2)
There are lots of Reddit apps. A lot of them are free and adless, and have at least as many features as the app made by Reddit itself.
If the official app starts including unblockable ads, that will just encourage people to start using Apollo or Narwhal instead, or one of the other several dozen clones.
Apps are bad! (Score:2)
And site's wonder why I want to browse their sites on the web no matter how much they push their app. And more often than not the desktop site thank you.
Reddit blows (Score:1)