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Snapchat Has A Deal With BuzzFeed, Vice, And Spotify

Lara O'Reilly   

Nov 05 2014 11:24 IST
Snapchat Has A Deal With BuzzFeed, Vice, And Spotify
Advertising1 min read

Evan Spiegel Portrait Illustration Snapchat ghosts

Mike Nudelman/Business Insider

Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel.

Snapchat looks as though it is entering the next stage of monetizing its popular photo sharing app. Digiday reports that the company is in negotiations with around a dozen media companies to launch a content section with the app called Discover that will serve up articles, music and videos.

The media brands, according to a mockup of the feature that Digiday has obtained, include: CNN, Mail Online, ESPN, Comedy Central, Cosmopolitan, BuzzFeed, Spotify, Vevo, National Geographic, Vice and People Magazine.

The spread of media brands are likely to appeal directly to the older teen and millennial users that dominate the app.

ESPN and Vevo confirmed to Digiday they were in conversations with Snapchat about working on the new platform. Business Insider has contacted Snapchat for confirmation and we will update this article when we receive a reply.

Sources told Digiday Snapchat will look to monetize the content - which, like photos and videos on the app, will only appear for a short period of time before disappearing - through advertising. The ads will be brokered by the media companies themselves, but Snapchat would get a slice of the revenue from the ads served on the app.

The Wall Street Journal first broke the news in August that Snapchat was working on a content section, but the mockup obtained by Digiday suggests the Discover feature might now be in the final stages before launch.

Snapchat rolled out the first ad campaign on the app - a trailer for Universal Studios' Ouija movie - in October.

Emily White, Snapchat's COO, has said Snapchat will ensure advertising on the app is overt rather than "native" to avoid users feeling like they are being "tricked." Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel has also confirmed ads on the app "aren't fancy" and that they are "not targeted."

Aside from advertising, Snapchat may also be looking to monetize the app through mobile payments. Earlier this year, the company filed two payment-related trademarks.

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