Startups

NewsUp mobile app: users earn redeemable points for reading, sharing news

The NewsUp team outside Apple during Life 3.0 in San Francisco in September. Photo courtesy of Andrew Schuster. Before Andrew Schuster founded NewsUp, his game for reading news and sharing articles with friends, he was busy trying to make news. Schuster, 26, grew up in Pikesville and co-founded an online magazine with his brother called […]

The NewsUp team outside Apple during Life 3.0 in San Francisco in September. Photo courtesy of Andrew Schuster.
Before Andrew Schuster founded NewsUp, his game for reading news and sharing articles with friends, he was busy trying to make news.
Schuster, 26, grew up in Pikesville and co-founded an online magazine with his brother called ChangeUp in 2009. It was something of a Thrillist for Baltimore and a handful of other cities, reporting on bars, music venues and under-the-radar spots. But after managing an in-house staff of six people, as well as 40 freelance writers, Schuster was “mentally, physically” exhausted, he says.
“We faced a lot of challenges as … a small, independent publisher,” says Schuster. “We started thinking about gamification and how we could apply that to content and content distribution.”
So that’s what he is working on now.

Watch NewsUp present at the September TechBreakfast:
http://www.youtube.com/v/Px2FKxmgTy8?version=3&hl=en_US
After shutting ChangeUp down, Schuster, his brother, Jason, and director of marketing Coleman Anderson stayed on to continue building NewsUp.
The mobile application delivers articles to users on subjects they’re interested in, sorted separately from the day’s headlines. Over time, the app learns which topics matter to readers, and then pushes those stories. Users earn points for reading articles, sharing articles and answering trivia questions related to the news of the day. Those points can then be redeemed for real prizes, like an iPad or a discounted meal at a local restaurant.
It’s a model that appears to interest people.
In September, the team demoed its current version of NewsUp at Life 3.0, hosted by Funders and Founders in San Francisco, and took third place among 45 startups that presented. A beta version of the app will be available late this year or early 2013.
Schuster, who lives in Mount Vernon and works at the Baltimore Sun as a digital sales specialist, says NewsUp is a Baltimore company through and through. Chris Brandenburg, the CTO of Millennial Media, is one of three advisers. (Another is Dave Pessah, the social media manager at Thrillist). And NewsUp was one of the four companies housed within the Emerging Technology Center in Canton for the first class of AccelerateBaltimore.
“AccelerateBaltimore gave us the capital for what we’re doing now,” says Schuster. “We were able to secure a technology team.”
Up until then, he says, NewsUp was “three non-tech guys trying to build a tech product without a technologist.”
Aside from the $25,000 in funding from the Baltimore accelerator, the app is paid for out of pocket by Schuster and the other four members of his team.
“We’re doing whatever we have to do,” he says.

Companies: Emerging Technology Centers (ETC Baltimore) / NewsUp / TechBreakfast / Millennial Media / Thrillist

Before you go...

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.

3 ways to support our work:
  • Contribute to the Journalism Fund. Charitable giving ensures our information remains free and accessible for residents to discover workforce programs and entrepreneurship pathways. This includes philanthropic grants and individual tax-deductible donations from readers like you.
  • Use our Preferred Partners. Our directory of vetted providers offers high-quality recommendations for services our readers need, and each referral supports our journalism.
  • Use our services. If you need entrepreneurs and tech leaders to buy your services, are seeking technologists to hire or want more professionals to know about your ecosystem, Technical.ly has the biggest and most engaged audience in the mid-Atlantic. We help companies tell their stories and answer big questions to meet and serve our community.
The journalism fund Preferred partners Our services
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

Baltimore's innovation scene proved its resilience in 2024

What actually is the 'creator economy'? Here's why we should care

Maryland governor appoints CIO to combat child poverty

Skills, not schools: A new path for government tech

Technically Media