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What Facebook’s Possible New News Feed Means for Users and Brands

What Facebook’s Possible New News Feed Means for Users and Brands

4 min read
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Written by
Monks

What Facebook’s Possible New News Feed Means for Users and Brands

In the middle of April, an eagle-eyed user discovered a news feed format explored via swiping, much like how users interact with Instagram and Facebook Stories. Initially suspected to be a bug, Facebook confirmed that the new newsfeed was indeed an early, internal prototype.

While it’s possible the prototype won’t see the light of day in its current form or even at all—it’s very much a work in progress, according to the Digital Trends story linked above—the interface got the creative wheels turning in our Monks’ heads. We spoke to Jon Biggs, an Executive Creative Director at MediaMonks who’s worked closely on a majority of our Facebook projects, about what a potential new news feed could mean for brands and users alike.

A News Feed Responding to New Behavior

A year ago, Mark Zuckerberg wrote in a post that content consumption on the platform is typically light on interaction and engagement: “Too often today, watching video, reading news or getting a page update is just a passive experience,” he wrote. While users can like or react to content, until recently there were few content formats that really allowed users to interact. In fact, we found that users spent only 1.7 seconds viewing a given piece of content on the news feed, prompting us to develop new formats that react to user behavior. As a platform, Facebook is likewise offering new, interactive formats like Camera Effects and 3D photos to inspire users to act.

Monk Thoughts Too often today watching video, reading news or getting a page update is just a passive experience.

Its Stories-inspired news feed prototype may signal Facebook’s desire to support more visually engaging, interactive formats. One year ago, after all, TechCrunch reported that sharing via Stories was growing 15-times faster than on the news feed; the reasoning behind the news feed prototype, then, could be to better support user behaviors when it comes to sharing or engaging with friends and loved ones.

“Facebook has introduced a lot of lovely formats that let brands achieve a lot more value within the space they have,” says Biggs. “This setup shows how they’re not restricting themselves to scrolling through the same old timeline, but looking at how the space can be used more effectively.”

That point on effectiveness is important, according to Biggs. Greater screen real estate can open the door to gorgeous new content, but brands must think critically about the value the content has on their experience. “If you have the whole screen to work with, you must make sure what you put there is really interesting,” Biggs says. “If not, then you’re interrupting the user experience—and you need to justify that interruption with something worthwhile.” Effective channel strategy built in response to user behavior is key for designing content that users will find valuable rather than annoying—especially when they’re presented with a rapid-fire stream of content as seen in Stories.

More Room to Love

The possibility of utilizing the full screen is particularly exciting for Biggs. “Posts on the news feed are quite limited and small,” he says—think of the truncated text post or small thumbnails appended to a link share. But the Stories-inspired format could provide brands with full-size content akin to Facebook’s Instant Articles, which are presented within a swipe-able carousel of content as well.

Monk Thoughts Facebook isn’t restricting itself to the same old timeline, but looking at how to use the space more effectively.

As a creative, Biggs is especially interested in how taking interactions from one part of the Facebook platform—the camera feed—to another can take engagement on the channel to a new level. “Facebook presents a nice space where you can take advantage of all the natural things people do with a phone: hold it, turn it around, shake it,” says Biggs. Selfie lenses let users play while checking themselves out with the camera, for example, while 3D or 360-degree photos transform devices into viewfinders that gaze into an alternate space. “If we begin to think about new ways to explore content, which might have been inspired by other channels themselves, how can we learn from that and make better things for Facebook?”

The Sign of More Changes to Come?

The unearthing of the Stories-inspired news feed prototype isn’t the first time Facebook has shown an interest in pulling together various platforms or channels within its suite of services. Earlier this year, Zuckerberg expressed plans to merge the backends of Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp and Instagram. The move to unify the backends would allow for easier end-to-end encryption, which is currently WhatsApp’s key differentiating factor. In addition to encryption across the platforms, the move could potentially harmonize the data between them, making it easier to surface up the types of content most relevant to users from their interactions across one platform to another.

“Is this prototype the first stage of Facebook pulling various parts of its ecosystem together?” Biggs asks rhetorically. He suggests that brands and users not hold their breath on a single platform that combines all three. “Putting all three platforms together would be risky from a user’s perspective,” he says, “as each excels at a different purpose: WhatsApp supports a more traditional conversation between people; Instagram is glossy and visual; while Facebook is most ideal for publishers.”

The real interesting development, says Biggs, is how interactions on one channel might continue to influence others: “They’re cross-pollinating the knowledge across the social ecosystem they’ve built.” How might future amalgams of the platforms drive new creative opportunities for brands to forge deeper relationships with their audiences? Only time will tell—though brands may want to study up on the myriad of user behaviors native to these platforms now so they’re ready to adapt to the next big change.

Innovate to give your Facebook audience something to smile about.

Facebook’s internal prototype testing a swipe-able, Stories-inspired news feed may signal the platform’s shift in priority to more interactive, engaging content. What Facebook’s Possible New News Feed Means for Users and Brands Facebook has been internally testing a new newsfeed–but what does that mean for you?
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