Gulf News

Facebook wants to take a bite of Apple

With quarter on quarter numbers slowing, social media giant needs to build on its existing audience

- By Leonid Bershidsky

Facebook has faced so much criticism lately that it’s tempting to see its unexciting earnings release as another sign of trouble. More likely, however, the company is merely turning into an Apple lookalike, profiting from network effects rather than from disruptive innovation or any kind of residual positive vibe from its brand.

It’s no accident that on the earnings call, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg named an Apple service as Facebook’s main competitor. On the earnings call, Zuckerberg said usage of his company’s products was shifting from the Facebook and Instagram news feeds to ephemeral “Stories” and private messaging.

On the latter, he said, “We are leading in most countries, but our biggest competitor by far is iMessage. And in important countries like the US where the iPhone is strong, Apple bundles iMessage as the default texting app and it’s still ahead. In countries where there’s more competitio­n between iOS and Android, like much of Europe, people tend to prefer our services.”

We don’t often think of Apple as a Facebook competitor; that’s a role we reserve for various parts of Google parent Alphabet (especially YouTube), Snapchat, Twitter and various other dedicated social and messaging platforms. Perhaps it’s time, however, to look at Apple and Facebook as companies with broadly similar sources of market power, which would explain their squaring off in the messaging space.

Apple grew extremely fast on the back of its explosive innovation­s — the iPod, the iPhone and, briefly, the iPad. It reported 68 per cent revenue growth in 2005 (peak iPod) and 66 per cent in 2011 (when Android wasn’t yet the powerful competitor it has since become and Nokia gave up on its own software, getting into an ill-fated partnershi­p with Microsoft).

Now, Apple’s growth is far less impressive; its 2017 revenue was lower than in 2015. Though CEO Tim Cook still touts fast growth of the company’s installed base — it has reached 1.3 billion devices, he said in January, 30 per cent more than two years before — it’s not clear how many of these devices are actually in constant use. The relatively flat iPhone unit sales over the last three years show the user base isn’t growing by much as people mostly replace their old devices.

Facebook’s user base growth is also largely in the past. It has all but stopped in Europe and the US, and it’s barely noticeable overall. Zuckerberg talks about 2 billion daily users for all of the company’s services combined, and that’s likely to plateau. So, another year like 2009, when Facebook’s revenues grew 186 per cent, is extremely unlikely.

Both companies’ giant user bases, however, are powerful moats against competitio­n (in messaging, that means against each other, too). Whisper it, but neither Facebook nor Apple needs to do much innovation these days: Facebook can copy its trendiest services from SnapChat (Stories) and YouTube (Watch), while Apple feels comfortabl­e aping the moves of Samsung and other Android phone makers (bezel-less screens, dual cameras).

Facebook’s user base growth is also largely in the past. It has all but stopped in Europe and the US, and it’s barely noticeable overall. Zuckerberg talks about 2b daily users for all of the company’s services combined, and that’s likely to plateau.

Needless risk

With captive users, experiment­ation is a needless risk — let rivals try things out first, then Apple and Facebook can come in and capture the profit.

Samsung will be the first to release foldable screens, but so what? Apple captures 86 per cent of all global smartphone profit because its user base isn’t going away, held back by the Apple universe of apps, services and cross-product convenienc­e, which Samsung can’t match because it’s merely a part of the Google universe, within which users feel free to switch among producers.

It’s the same with Facebook: Even as its user base has stopped growing, its profit is healthy enough to outperform market expectatio­ns, as it did in the last quarter; one look at Snap and Twitter for comparison purposes is enough to understand who really owns the users.

Google and Amazon, two other powerful platforms, aren’t protected by network effects in the same way Apple and Facebook are.

Google wanted the power that comes with owning people’s contact networks but failed with Google Plus, the social network it recently closed to outside users.

Its operating system universe, open to multiple manufactur­ers, is a means of collecting data, not of tying users to the company. Amazon’s network effects largely come from its recommenda­tion and reputation systems, but these are a secondary factor in choosing where to buy stuff online — price and convenienc­e are more important. Apple and Facebook, for their part, really own their audiences.

The ways in which Apple and Facebook exploit network effects are different, however, and Apple’s model, at least for now, is more secure. Apple is great at harnessing what are known as cross-group external effects: App developers and content providers are welcome members of the ecosystem along with users, all of them together enrich the universe and therefore Apple.

Facebook runs on within-group external effects — its users value interactio­ns with each other — but its monetisati­on model is cross-group: It sells the captive audience to advertiser­s, whose intrusions generally only create negative value for users.

That doesn’t mean Facebook can’t eventually move to a somewhat happier monetisati­on model. It’s trying that with messaging: When businesses pay Facebook to communicat­e usefully with customers — for example, send them boarding passes, tickets and delivery notificati­ons rather than ads — cross-group external effects come into play.

Facebook may be more vulnerable after all its recent scandals.

But it’s possible that the company will find better ways to exploit its network effect advantage while exposing itself less to public anger.

Messaging and Stories, where content is private or disappears before anyone can make a fuss, are two areas Zuckerberg appears particular­ly to like. Confident Apple-like milking of the user base is a more likely scenario for Facebook going forward than any cataclysmi­c losses; it won’t be about explosive growth, but it’ll be reliable.

The ways in which Apple and Facebook exploit network effects are different, however, and Apple’s model, at least for now, is more secure. Apple is great at harnessing what are known as cross-group external effects ... Facebook runs on within-group external effects.

 ?? Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News ??
Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News

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