The Borneo Post

Snap’s strategy shifts win over advertiser­s more than users

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SAN FRANCISCO: Snap Inc on Tuesday received a vote of confidence from a billionair­e investor and reported record revenue from outside North America, factors that helped soften the blow of its first- ever drop in daily users.

The social media company said its shift toward a self- serve model for advertiser­s was paying off and blamed a redesign of its app for denting user numbers. Still, analysts expressed concern that advertiser­s and users prefer Fa- cebook Inc’s Instagram app over Snapchat.

Snap picked up a big backer in Saudi Arabia’s Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who announced soon after the second-quarter results he had bought a 2.3 per cent stake for US$ 250 million in May. He said in a statement Snap had just begun to “scratch the surface of its true potential.”

Shares in Snap were flat in after-hours trading following volatility that saw them fall briefly before surging more than 12 per cent.

The company has shifted over the last year to primarily selling ads through self- service, automated auctions rather than direct sales. That has come at the cost of the premium feel Snap had tried to ascribe to its ads, but given overall sales a jolt by attracting more advertiser­s.

Snap has been able to boost sales volumes by competing with bigger services on price. Prices fell nine per cent in the second quarter compared with the previous quarter and 52 per cent from a year ago.

“It gives an incredible opportunit­y for advertiser­s to come and win on our platform,” chief strategy officer Imran Khan told ana-

It gives an incredible opportunit­y for advertiser­s to come and win on our platform.

Imran Khan, Snap chief strategy officer

lysts on a webcast on Tuesday.

With self-service ads, Snap has been able to grow revenue in regions such as Australia and the Middle East, where direct sales efforts are more limited and advertiser­s have few other options to market to its mainly 18- 34-yearold users.

Snap also has been redesignin­g its app to encourage users to interact with more of its ad-supported videos.

Its global revenue was US$ 262 million in the second quarter, beating the Thomson Reuters estimate of US$ 250.43 million, as average revenue per user surged to US$ 1.40 from US$ 1.05 a year ago.

Snap forecast third- quarter sales of US$ 265 million to US$ 290 million, up 27 per cent to 39 per cent from a year earlier, compared with 44 per cent revenue growth in the second quarter.

Daily Snapchat users fell to 188 million in the second quarter from 191 million in the prior quarter. Snap had never before logged a quarterly drop in daily users, according to data it has released going back to 2014.

Snap lost about one million users in each of its three geographic reporting regions: North America, Europe and rest of world.

Analysts on average expected Snap to gain nearly two million users in the second quarter from the first.

The company cautioned that usage tends to slow in the third quarter, but did not make a specific forecast.

Earnings from Facebook and Twitter Inc in recent weeks spooked social media investors by showing issues around data privacy, abusive content and phony accounts were weighing on user growth. Both companies shed some 19 per cent in market value after reporting.

But some analysts on Tuesday brushed off Snap’s user drop, saying that Snapchat always had more limited appeal than larger rivals.

“It’s always going to be a niche platform, so the modest change isn’t very remarkable,” said Pivotal Research’s Brian Wieser.

Snap executives told analysts that the redesign was the primary reason for usage slipping and that a European Union data protection law that spurred changes to user privacy terms had no material effect.

Users on average continue to spend more than 30 minutes on Snapchat each day, executives said.

Snap said ending leases in Venice, California, to consolidat­e offices a few miles north in Santa Monica cost it US$ 3.9 million in the second quarter and would result in total expenses of US$ 25 million to US$ 45 million in 2018, mostly in the current quarter.

Employees had griped about Snap’s network of small, spread out offices in Venice. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Snap forecast third-quarter sales of US$265 million to US$290 million, up 27 per cent to 39 per cent from a year earlier, compared with 44 per cent revenue growth in the second quarter.
— Reuters photo Snap forecast third-quarter sales of US$265 million to US$290 million, up 27 per cent to 39 per cent from a year earlier, compared with 44 per cent revenue growth in the second quarter.
 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Snap picked up a big backer in Saudi Arabia’s Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who announced soon after the second-quarter results he had bought a 2.3 per cent stake for US$250 million in May.
— Reuters photo Snap picked up a big backer in Saudi Arabia’s Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who announced soon after the second-quarter results he had bought a 2.3 per cent stake for US$250 million in May.

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