Austin American-Statesman

Snapchat users reject redesign; shares plummet

- By Sarah Frier Bloomberg News

Snapchat’s redesign isn’t working.

In November, parent company Snap Inc. embarked on a dramatic reorganiza­tion of its mobile photo-sharing app to combat sluggish growth. But once the update reached all of Snapchat’s users in the first quarter, user additions and sales slowed even further amid a public revolt over the new design.

Revenue gains in the current quarter will be even smaller, the company said Tuesday, sending shares plunging as much as 20 percent in New York on Wednesday, the biggest intraday drop in almost a year.

Chief Executive Officer Evan Spiegel made the case that while the change is disruptive in the short-term, it’s necessary to fuel Snap’s business into the future. But two quarters in, he’s having a hard time making that argument work.

Spiegel’s pitch for the new way of using Snapchat was rooted in his strong belief that messages and posts from friends should be separate from content from strangers and companies, and that mixing the two makes real relationsh­ips less intimate. Celebritie­s aren’t your friends, Spiegel said at the time.

In one concession to the app’s critics, Snap is making a further tweak to Snapchat’s design to put some updates from friends back into the part of the applicatio­n with news and celebritie­s, Spiegel said Tuesday. The friend content will be on the top of a scrolling feed. The decision could provide some relief to users — or it could further confuse the public about Spiegel’s vision.

In its earnings report, revenue was $230.7 million, well below prediction­s for $244.9 million.

Los Angeles-based Snap has had trouble sustaining momentum as a public company, providing lots of change and uncertaint­y for investors who hoped to see consistent growth. In recent months, the company lost several top executives and cut 7 percent of its staff in a reorganiza­tion. Revenue gains in the current period will “decelerate substantia­lly” from the first quarter, Snap said, when sales climbed 54 percent. That indicates growth will be far less than the 62 percent analysts expected on average.

“Snap is going through a painful maturation phase,” said Daniel Ives, an analyst at GBH Insights. Wall Street was looking for “further red flags around the company’s much-discussed app redesign,” he said.

The company’s net loss in the recent period narrowed to $385.8 million, or 30 cents a share, according to a statement on Tuesday.

Snap failed to add as many users as projected even as its larger social-media competitor, Facebook, endured public controvers­ies over data collection and its products. In the month of March — which marked the start of the privacy crisis for Facebook — Snap’s daily average user count actually dropped below the average for the quarter, Spiegel said.

On Tuesday, Facebook announced plans to invest more deeply in the “stories” function that allows posting of videos and photos that disappear in 24 hours, which it copied from Snapchat. On WhatsApp, Facebook’s global chat app, a similar feature is used 450 million times a day, the company said.

Snap has aimed to set itself up to brands and advertiser­s as an alternativ­e to Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Facebook, which generate the majority of growth in digital marketing. Advertiser­s are hungry for another option, but some of them are still experiment­ing.

“Snap had its work cut out in terms of convincing marketers to engage more substantiv­ely with its platform,” Mark Mahaney, an analyst with RBC Capital Markets, said in a note to investors. His firm’s survey found that 73 percent of marketers don’t spend on Snap.

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