preferences.
The thing is, low-content reporting (short listicles that are mostly images, 500-word âarticlesâ that are mostly pull quotes from otherâŚ
Iâve never believed that clickbait had anything to do with audience preferences. The popularity of longreads shows that people would well and truly prefer to read proper, in-depth journalism.
The thing is, low-content reporting (short listicles that are mostly images, 500-word âarticlesâ that are mostly pull quotes from other peopleâs coverage, reposted press releases) is super cheap and easily outsourced to content farms. If youâre being paid by the click and you canât easily maximize the clicks (because youâre in a red queenâs race) then you can at least make sure youâre spending as little money as possible on each ad-hosting page of âcontentâ.
By John Ohno on November 7, 2016.
[Canonical link](https://medium.com/@enkiv2/ive-never-believed-that-clickbait- had-anything-to-do-with-audience-preferences-d5136786e145)
Exported from Medium on September 18, 2020.