Upworthy is a site best known for video. Once the king of viral content, the site rose to fame by unearthing uplifting videos from the dredges of the web, pairing them with attention-grabbing and highly shareable headlines and sending them out into the world of Facebook, where they garnered tens of thousands of shares. The video content format was so popular, in fact, that by November of 2013, the site had gained 90 million unique readers in this fashion.
But it wasn't all gravy - in August 2014, when Facebook altered its policy on clickbait headlines, Upworthy's readership began took an alarming plunge due to aggregated content. The site has since recovered, but in order to do so it had to make a somewhat uncharacteristic move - rather than aggregating content and throwing it out to the Internet at will, Upworthy was forced to begin creating original content, which quickly allowed the company to get back on track and revitalize subscriber numbers.
The Upworthy saga is a perfect example as to the power of original content, and dozens of brands, blogs and companies would benefit from taking notice.
The Dangers of Content Aggregation
Aggregation is the act of gathering together existing content and repackaging it for new use. Although it's a royal flush in terms of convenience, it's ultimately not sustainable, as Upworthy learned. One of the reasons for this is that aggregation relies heavily on sensationalism - in order to be effective, aggregated content needs to be sensationalized enough to draw clicks and shares.The process of sensationalism often entails taking run-of-the-mill content, affixing a jolting, curiosity-grabbing and sometimes misleading title, then pushing it out to the web. Before its recent turnaround, Upworthy did this very well.
Upworthy has long been known for its carefully crafted headlines. They're immediately recognizable: long (often up to three sentences) and demanding, these headlines call upon people to recognize a social or cultural injustice, click for a miracle cure, learn an incredible secret in six seconds or simply be amazed by a video display of human compassion or ignorance. It's obvious that Upworthy's headlines follow a carefully crafted format and are geared towards eliciting the maximum amount of reader response in the least possible time - an example of Upworthy's sensationalist headlines was included in the Fall 2013 roundup of the site's most shared articles: "This Amazing Kid Just Died. What He Left Behind is Wondtacular." This headline is a perfect example of the baiting and hyperbole that underlies aggregation. Although the practice of sensational headlines is misleading, and is often criticized for being exploitative and underhanded, tying dramatic headlines to dull, aggregated content was wildly successful...until it wasn't.
Upworthy began to realize the dangers of aggregation when its content started getting filtered out by Facebook's spam guards and the social media platform moved toward auto-play video. When this resulted in a massive drop in readership, Upworthy realized it was time to take a tip from the Phoenix and rise from the aggregation-induced ashes. They did this by making the radical and very wise move from curation to content.
The Transition to Original Content
Thanks to its previous position as a powerhouse of the curation and aggregation field, Upworthy had a unique and intimate understanding of what its readers and subscribers would relate to and choose to share, an understanding they brought into their mission to create original content.
While the company still deals heavily in video, those videos are now methodically framed, edited and distributed so as to invoke the highest possible emotional response from readers. Additionally, Upworthy now has a team of writers on hand to craft original content.
The reason for Upworthy's switch to original content comes down to the fact that aggregated content is easy to copy and, with so much content flooding the net on a daily basis, being easy to copy is a death sentence. As Upworthy gained popularity, other sites caught on and began applying Upworthy's viral headline format to their own content, which lead to Upworthy being outranked and overlooked in favor of the copycats.
While aggregated and curated content is easy to copy, original content is not, and Upworthy was forced to take notice. Upworthy's transition toward original content was first reported in June of 2015 and since then, the company has seen a significant uptick in traffic. This goes to show that, as the web at large pushes harder and harder to move away from mass-produced, shallow content, and as Google continues to update its algorithms with additional filtering complexities like Panda and Phantom, sites that produce original content are more likely to take the lead.
The Battle for the Lead: Curation Vs Content
With such a deluge of content available on the web today, it's clear that original content has the power to overtake curated content. While aggregated and curated content may be easy to produce and is capable of attracting readers in a short period of time, it's not a sustainable system and ultimately runs like a boom and bust economy. Spammy content only works for so long and, eventually, spam filters, reader preference and the press of high-quality content will catch up.
While it may seem like a quick road to readership, aggregation and curation are not in a company's best content marketing interests. If there's one thing we can learn from the Upworthy saga, it's that there are no free lunches and companies, brands and blogs are much better served, in the long-term, by outfitting their brand with high-quality, original content from the get-go.
This post originally appeared on the Express Writers blog.