UNFRIENDING FACEBOOK
World’s largest social app has finally been eclipsed in popularity by others
New survey finds social network losing its appeal among U.S. teens,
Three years ago, Facebook was the dominant social media site among U.S. teens, visited by 71 per cent of people in that magic, trendsetting demographic. Not anymore.
Now, only 51 per cent of kids between 13 and 17 use Facebook, according to Pew Research Center.
The world’s largest social network has finally been eclipsed in popularity by YouTube, Snapchat and Facebook-owned Instagram.
“The social media environment today revolves less around a single platform than it did three years ago,” the researchers wrote in a survey published Thursday.
Alphabet Inc.’s YouTube is the most popular, used by 85 per cent of teens.
The U.S. is by far Facebook’s most lucrative advertising market, where it makes a staggering $23.59 (U.S.) in quarterly revenue per user.
But that doesn’t mean growth can continue forever. The company said in its most recent earnings call that it’s effectively saturated the market in America and Canada, counting 185 million users in those two countries combined.
The study demonstrates how difficult it may be to keep up that level of dominance, and how important the 2012 Instagram acquisition has been for Facebook’s future.
Instagram is slightly more popular than Snapchat overall, Pew said, with 72 per cent of respondents saying they use the app compared with Snapchat’s 69 per cent. But Snap Inc. is holding its own, despite Instagram’s frequent parroting of its features.
About one-third of the survey’s respondents said they visit Snapchat and YouTube most often, while 15 per cent said Instagram is their frequent destination.
Pew noted that the biggest change since its last teen survey, besides Facebook’s fall from dominance, was just how ubiquitous smartphones have become among young people.
So in some ways, all the apps are winners.