Los Angeles Times

Facebook no longer No. 1 app for teens

Only 51% of kids ages 13 to 17 use the social network, beaten by Snapchat and others, a Pew study finds.

- Bloomberg

Three years ago, Facebook was the dominant social media site among U.S. teenagers, visited by 71% of people in that magic, trendsetti­ng demographi­c. Not anymore.

Now, only 51% of kids ages 13 to 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 Inc.-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% of teens, according to Pew.

The U.S. is by far Facebook’s most lucrative advertisin­g market, where it makes a staggering $23.59 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 has effectivel­y saturated the market in the U.S. 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. Facebook didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Instagram is slightly more popular than Snapchat overall, Pew said, with 72% of respondent­s saying they use the photoshari­ng app, compared with Snapchat’s 69%. 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% said Instagram is their most frequent destinatio­n.

Meanwhile, only 10% of teens said Facebook is their most-used online platform. The Pew analysis was based on a survey of 1,058 parents who have a teenager from 13 to 17, as well as interviews with 743 teens themselves. Interviews were conducted online and by telephone from March 7 to April 10.

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. Ninety-five percent of teens own a smartphone or have access to one, and 45% said they’re online “on a near-constant basis.”

So in some ways, all the apps are winners.

 ?? Jenny Kane Associated Press ?? ALPHABET Inc.’s YouTube is the most popular app among teens, used by 85% of them, the study found.
Jenny Kane Associated Press ALPHABET Inc.’s YouTube is the most popular app among teens, used by 85% of them, the study found.

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