Newsy’s decision was driven in part by the consumption habits of its audience, which increasingly preferred to lean back and spend more time watching Newsy on connected TV screens. Today, the average session time on Newsy’s app for Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV and Roku TV is between 30 and 60 minutes, with Roku consumption falling on the top end of that spectrum, according to Sabatinelli. Newsy also programs its TV apps like linear TV channels, with the video stream autoplaying as soon as the app is fired up on these platforms.
“People are treating it like TV, so we’re treating it like TV,” Sabatinelli said.
Newsy still has its desktop and mobile products, and it distributes videos on Facebook and other social platforms. There, the approach is to distribute individual Newsy clips, with a focus on building awareness for the brand and getting users to come to Newsy’s owned-and-operated channels.
While Newsy was the first digital-first media company to launch channels on Sling TV and YouTube TV, the company is also interested in traditional cable and satellite distribution. In December, Newsy announced carriage deals with Comcast, AT&T and Spectrum, among other pay-TV providers. Because of these deals, Newsy is now available in 26 million U.S. homes. The plan is to be in about 40 million homes by the end of 2018, the company said.
For Newsy, distribution on pay-TV services also opens up the ability create a diversified revenue portfolio beyond advertising. While Sabatinelli didn’t disclose how much Newsy gets paid by distributors, he confirmed that Newsy has nabbed a carriage fee from some distributors.
This is different from some of Newsy’s competitors. Cheddar, for instance, does not command a carriage fee from Sling TV and YouTube TV (where it just launched), in exchange for the ability to sell more inventory on the channels. Other digital publishers eyeing distribution on these TV services are taking a similar approach: Get distribution now, and aim for a carriage fee once it’s proven that they’re getting viewership.
It helps that pay-TV distributors, both traditional and digital, are looking for younger viewers, and digital publishers are using that demand to nab distribution on these services, said Alan Wolk, lead analyst for consulting firm TVRev. “There’s no downside right now because [digital publishers] are fairly inexpensive and can potentially bring in younger viewers,” Wolk said.
Newsy pitches itself as a facts-focused news network targeting millennials, competing directly against the shout-a-thons on traditional cable news. When asked whether it makes sense, then, to chase linear TV distribution at a time when millennials seem to be cutting the cord, Sabatinelli pointed to the scoreboard.