The Mercury

Facebook breaks no sweat as it takes over world

- Shira Ovide

REMEMBER that kid in high school with flawless skin, straight-A grades and a gorgeous jump shot? The one who did everything perfectly, and you envied/hated her for it? Facebook is that kid.

While the rest of the tech superpower­s have been flop sweating recently through their quarterly earnings reports, Facebook just breezed by, struck a glamorous pose for its promposal Instagram photos and collected its garlands.

The company in the first quarter posted its fastest rate of revenue growth since 2014 at 51.9 percent, even though Facebook has almost doubled the sales it had two years ago. Its user base is bigger than the population of China, and yet THE MAJORITY of people using Snapchat’s applicatio­n were making videos, fuelling a boom in watching them, the company told its investors.

More than a third of Snapchat’s daily users created “Stories”, broadcasti­ng photos and videos that lasted 24 hours, according to people familiar with the matter. Now users watched 10 billion videos a day on the applicatio­n, up from 8 billion in February, the people said, asking not to be identified more people are becoming citizens of Planet Facebook.

After seeing Facebook stumble its way through its 2012 initial public offering, it would because the informatio­n was not public.

Snapchat is sharing the new stories statistic with investors to help explain that its app is focused on serving people who create and broadcast content, not just consume it. The first screen of the app is a camera, prompting users to share what they are seeing or doing.

The design gives the company an edge in a market where Facebook is building a business quickly. have been hard to imagine four years later that Facebook would be the best managed of the large tech companies.

Mark Zuckerberg in January

Facebook and Twitter do not release statistics on what percentage of their users broadcast per day, instead focusing on metrics about visitors and time spent. Facebook this week said the average user spent 50 minutes a day on its apps, not including WhatsApp.

Snapchat, which last raised money at a $16 billion (R231bn) valuation, had more than 100 million daily users, Evan Spiegel, the chief executive, said. – Bloomberg described his repeatable blueprint for turning his social networks into businesses with $20 billion (R288bn) in annual sales. First the company made a cool digital hangout. Then it invited businesses.

“And then only once you have that ramped up to a good scale can you really start dialling up advertisin­g,” Zuckerberg said.

His company has pulled off this play so far with its main social network, and the same formula seems to be working with Instagram, which opened to all advertiser­s a few months ago.

It is too soon to tell whether the Zuckerberg playbook will work for Messenger, WhatsApp, or its nascent live video offering. But given the company’s success so far, it should get the benefit of the doubt.

As Apple once did, Facebook has both torrid sales growth and impressive profits. Unlike Apple, Facebook has a line-up of money-making opportunit­ies to keep its motion machine going. – Bloomberg

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