Publishers reveal what it's really like using Facebook's Instant Articles so far

Mark Zuckerberg question mark
Mark Zuckerberg question mark

(Robert Galbraith/flickr)
Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg

10 months ago, Facebook launched the first trial of “

Instant Articles,” its bid to have publishers put their articles directly into the Facebook app instead of first on their websites.

The pitch was that Facebook hosting these articles would provide a much faster, cleaner experience for mobile readers — 10 times faster in fact.

The catch was that publishers would have to conform to Facebook’s various specifications, including for advertising (though some of those rules relaxed in December). But for optimists, the theory was that any temporary advertising losses would be made up by a mix of increased shareability and reader goodwill.

In the months since the product launch, Facebook has opened Instant Articles up to more and more publishers, and will make it available to everyone on April 12 at its F8 conference.

We talked to a bunch of publishers who got early access to Instant Articles to see how the experience has gone so far.

The Good

BuzzFeed and Vox, two new media heavyweights valued at over $1 billion, have similar opinions when it comes to Instant Articles.

For both companies, it fits into their push to be everywhere their audience is, and to make their content as accessible as possible across platforms like Snapchat, Facebook, and so on. They see the fast-loading Instant Articles as a much better experience for their readers, and are trying to maximize the amount available.

gawker instant 1
gawker instant 1

(Business Insider)
The lightning bolt denotes an Instant Article in your Facebook feed.

There are, however, some barriers to BuzzFeed and Vox making 100% of their articles available on Facebook Instant. For example, Vox’s “

cards” format is currently not supported, which limits Vox.com, and part of BuzzFeed’s money machine is sponsored content, which also doesn’t really work for Instant Articles.

But so far Instant Articles have been a success for Vox and BuzzFeed.

Both companies have seen a noticeable increase in how widely an Instant Article proliferates on Facebook versus a “normal” article.

At Vox, its new focus on off-website content (including Instant Articles) has also actually boosted unique visitors back to its websites, Vox’s VP of Growth and Analytics, Melissa Bell, tells Business Insider. It is helping build the Vox brands in general, she says. BuzzFeed’s “uniques” growth has not seen the same sort of bump, but the company has argued that this is an outdated metric to judge a media property on (versus its total reach on all platforms).

Vox isn’t the only publisher eyeing Instant Articles as a potential way to boost uniques. Early this month, Gawker Media founder Nick Denton tweeted that daily uniques to its properties increased immediately after the introduction of Facebook Instant articles, though it seems too soon to say if this is long-term trend. The bump could also have been caused by other factors.