WhatsApp, SnapChat And LINE: Does Mobile Messaging Apps Are Taking Teens Away From Facebook?

Monday, November 11, 2013

WhatsApp, SnapChat And LINE: Why Mobile Messaging Apps Are Taking Teens Away From Facebook





When Facebook Inc. (NASDAQ:FB) disclosed its third quarter earnings a couple of weeks ago, David Ebersman, Facebook’s chief financial officer, noted that the Menlo Park, Calif.-based social network had seen a decrease in daily usage amongst teenagers. It turns out that more and more young users are instead communicating with each other on mobile messaging apps like WhatsApp, LINE, Kik and many others like them.


WhatsApp now has more than 350 million active users (omg :o), making the world’s most popular messaging app and even more active users than Twitter. The Gaurdian estimates that WhatsApp is on more than 95 percent of all smartphones in Spain and that the majority of these users are under 25.

A part of the reason is that Facebook just isn’t cool anymore. While Facebook is proud of its 1.2 billion monthly active users, younger people don’t like their News Feeds filled with updates about their Aunt and her cat, or have their parents “Liking” everything they post. (Lol :D)

Messaging apps are also more private. It’s safer and more intimate to directly share a status, picture or video through a private message than to post on Facebook.

Just look at the success of Snapchat, which deletes an image or video just a few seconds after they are seen, allowing teens to send images that won’t be permanently recorded online. Snapchat now has about 5 million monthly active users and valued between $2 billion and $4 billion.

Messaging apps have become so popular, they have even become like social networks in their own right and have added features beyond simple messaging. Kakoa Talk in South Korea, WeChat in China, LINE in Japan and Kik in Canada allow users to send stickers, play games and share music. These features have generated millions in sales. Though WhatsApp sticks to just messaging, its rolling out an API to make it easy for users to share content through WhatsApp, sort of like the Facebook “Like” button that is now ubiquitous on websites.

Facebook tried to downplay the trend, saying that it’s difficult to get accurate metrics on young users, but it is obvious that the social network has taken notice. Facebook has been giving its own Messenger service more attention lately, including a redesigned stand-alone app.

After reporting that it made $425 million in the previous quarter, it’s doubtful that Facebook is too worried at this point. But with more and more young people using messaging apps instead of the social network, it can only be a matter of time before older people catch on as well.

Do you use messaging apps instead of Facebook? Let us know in the comments.

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