Snapchat is afs 394 asu religion sex power eroticismthe latest social network to roll out a voter registration initiative in the run up to the 2018 midterm elections. But with its engaged and youthful user base, and the registration tool's deeply integrated design, it may actually have the power to reach (and register) new voters.
Beginning Tuesday, all Snapchat users over the age of 18 will receive a new "Register to vote" link directly in their profile page, that takes them to an in-app TurboVote portal. They'll also get a notification alerting them of the new feature, and one of those cutesy video messages Snap usually reserves for national holidays.
Snapchat is also releasing a voter registration filter, and it will have a curated Our Story about issues that Snapchat users are passionate about; swiping up on the story will take users to the registration portal. It is also including a swipe up to register to vote option on the Discover pages of some media partners like the Washington Postand Good Luck America.
SEE ALSO: America's youth finally destroyed slacktivismLast election cycle, Snapchat also ran a voter registration campaign. Video ads with links to register appeared between stories; this is similar to what Instagram is doing this year. But Snap's 2018 initiative is more robust than its past efforts.
Its placement in the profile section also differentiates it from Facebook and Twitter. Both other social networks have included a prompt to register in the news feeds. Snapchat doesn't exactly have a newsfeed (the closest would be the story feed), so that wasn't a 1:1 option. Snapchat says that placing the button in the profile was strategic: the profile section is highly trafficked, according to Snap, because its where users view their stories.
But including register to vote in the profile section also makes a strong statement: it says that being a registered voter and an active participant in democracy is an important part of one's identity. Maybe that's being a tad corny, but considering that our social media profiles are something we so carefully groom to reflect the person we want to be to the outside world, Snap asserting voter registration as a facet of that identity is significant — and perhaps something that will resonate with Snapchat's politically active Gen-Z and young millennial user base.
Snap is also confident that it can reach a high amount of new voters: 80 percent of its users are over 18, so this campaign won't just fall on well-meaning (but still too young) thumbs. It also claims that marketers using Snapchat can reach a comparable number of 18-24 year old users to Instagram. Snapchat says it reaches 28.5 to 30 million 18-24 year old users in the U.S. According to a recent survey of Instagram users, approximately 32 percent of its 1 billion-strong user base is 18-24.
But Snapchat also claims its users are highly engaged. According to Snapchat, the average user logs in 20 times a day, sends 20 snaps, and spends an average of 30 minutes on the app per day. Geez, don't these kids have classes to attend?
This won't be the first time that teens use Snapchat as a portal for political action. The Snap Maps feature reflected, and perhaps even helped spread, the tide of walkouts that teenagers engaged in to demand gun control in the wake of the Parkland, Florida high school shooting.
Still, registering to vote and enabling teens to share issues they're passionate about is just a first — and rather neutrally feel-good — step to using the Snapchat platform for progressive good. And whether social media platforms should leverage their power in politics at all is not a clear cut issue, either; Facebook users inadvertently participated in a social experiment when Facebook studied how placing a voting encouragement button affected the 2010 elections.
But in the past year alone, teens have demonstrated that they have the power to change the national conversation and mood. So empowering this rather inspiring group through simple, easy-to-use design, might just remind us of the much-touted, though less frequently demonstrated, ability of social media to do actual good.
Now all we have to do is actually get to the polls. See you on November 6!
UPDATE Tuesday, Oct. 23, 4:00 p.m. PT:
Democracy Works, the creator of TurboVote, has shared that the Snapchat integration succeeded in registering over 400,000 users to vote.
Notably, the numbers bear out that Snapchat's initiative was an effective way to mobilize young people: 57 percent of those registered were between the ages of 18-24.
"This demographic is difficult to reach and traditionally displays low participation in elections," Mike Ward, TurboVote's program director, wrote in a memo. "This makes the distribution of Snapchat's voters by age all the more impressive."
Seeking Soul Cakes: A Halloween SongThe Other Paris: An Interview with Luc SanteThe History of the Grand Guignol Is Expectably TerrifyingThe History of the Grand Guignol Is Expectably TerrifyingWhy Do Fairy Tales Turn Old Women into Victims?Moebius and the Key of Dreams: On Jean Giraud's Astonishing MultiverseChristopher Logue’s Poster PoemsThe Captain’s DollPairing Artists with Corporations: Los Angeles in the SixtiesBetter Than Your Name in Lights? Your Name in Appliqué.Where the Mets Meet Mark Twain: A Perilously Catchy ChantSome Are More Human Than Others: Stevie Smith’s SketchesRimbaud in the Alps: A Harrowing, Beautiful Letter from 1878Women in Crime: An Interview with Sarah WeinmanGothic Horror and the Odd Appeal of “Melmoth the Wanderer”Portrait of a MiniseriesChristopher Logue’s Poster PoemsPairing Artists with Corporations: Los Angeles in the SixtiesIn SixteenthOn Daphne du Maurier’s “Monte Verità” The entire 'Star Wars' film library is coming to cable TV Today in You Are Old: Shaq's son vs. Ron Artest's son in high school hoops All the best reactions to Apple's brand new emoji NBA, Facebook's Oculus give us the best VR sports film yet, via the 2016 Finals Melania Trump shares legal letter on immigration status on Twitter Lyft and Anheuser Please do your best to avoid the huge moon balloon rolling through China The 5 best Aussie stickers on iOS 10's sparkly new Messages app Tom Brady has some very harsh words for strawberries India offers land to Elon Musk to test Hyperloop Alexa gets a British accent with Amazon Echo launch in UK and Germany Look what happens when people drive to the eye doctor alone NFL reportedly in talks with Lady Gaga for Super Bowl halftime show What have Colin Kaepernick's protests accomplished? 9 reasons you should download iOS 10 now The NFL just fined two Broncos for their helmet Zayn Malik is writing an autobiography and we have some burning questions Emma Stone, Ryan Gosling dance their way into our hearts in magical musical 'La La Land' Mum makes heartbreaking plea in video about her son's death Fancy cat will drink only from the finest glassware
3.1055s , 10197.0234375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【afs 394 asu religion sex power eroticism】,Pursuit Information Network