Thursday, April 16, 2015

Messaging apps are overtaking social networks to become the dominant platforms on phones


Marcelo Ballve | April 16, 2015
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BII_MessagingvsSocial2015


Messaging apps hit an important milestone at the end of March, according to our ongoing tracking of messaging-app user numbers. For the first time, the top four messaging apps combined have just as many users as the top four social networks. (See chart, above.)
  • Put together, WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, WeChat, and Viber have 2.125 billion monthly active users globally (users who accessed the apps at least once in a 30-day period). And these are all mobile users. 
  • That's compared to the same number, 2.125 billion, users of Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Instagram combined. But these numbers also include millions of PC-only users. 
Facebook F8 messenger
In the United States, where messaging apps were late to catch on, many tech-industry observers still misunderstand why these apps are so powerful. They are not just free alternatives to SMS texting. Smartphone owners turn to messaging apps for much more than instant messages. Messaging app users trade emojis, digital stickers, GIFs, video clips, photos, news, and video calls. Increasingly, these apps are also emerging as hubs for e-commerce and business-to-customer interactions. Facebook Messenger's recent reinvention was all about encouraging these expanded uses.
A note on the chart above, and the data underlying it: while there will be audience overlap among these services (in other words, many WhatsApp users will also use Facebook Messenger, and so on) we believe there is actually less overlap among different messaging apps' user bases than there are for social networks. In part that's because apps like WeChat and Viber are geographically restricted. The former is mostly used in China, and the latter is strong in western markets, etc. In any case, the point is: messaging apps' total audience advantage is likely greater than what this chart indicates.