Effective Headlines of Newspaper Articles in a Digital Environment
Jeffrey Kuiken and Anne Schuth and Martijn Spitters and Maarten Marx. In Digital Journalism, 2017.
Abstract
We study the effect on click-through rates of applying textual and stylistic features often related to clickbait to headlines of newspaper articles which can be bought in a digital environment. Having a dataset consisting of triples—original headline, rewritten headline, CTR, where CTR is the click-through rate of the rewritten headline in a newsletter from the online kiosk Blendle— we can directly measure whether these “clickbait features” do what they are believed to do: entice readers to click on them. The main findings are as follows. First, the data shows that editors of Blendle indeed often use clickbait features when rewriting headlines. Second, most, but not all, of the clickbait features lead to a statistically significant increase in the number of clicks. Third, predicting the effectiveness of a headline only on the basis of its clickbait features is not possible. The data on which this article is based is publicly available online.
Links
Effective Headlines of Newspaper Articles in a Digital Environment
https://doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2017.1279978
Bib
@article{kuiken2017, title = {Effective Headlines of Newspaper Articles in a Digital Environment}, author = {Jeffrey Kuiken and Anne Schuth and Martijn Spitters and Maarten Marx}, year = {2017}, journal = {Digital Journalism}, doi = {10.1080/21670811.2017.1279978} }