NIKILA SRINIVASAN’S ELDERLY mother in Chennai uses WhatsApp to talk to her milkman. Like millions of other Indians, the messaging service is her link to various users and services, and her US-based daughter. “WhatsApp is a place where people are having their everyday conversations,” says Srinivasan, Global VP of Business Messaging at Meta. One of her responsibilities is to look for ways to monetise WhatsApp.
And that is a question that has bugged the messaging service for long. In 2014, when Facebook (now Meta) Founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled his plans to acquire WhatsApp for $19.6 billion, many called the deal overvalued. But ace investor Warren Buffett spoke favourably. “I don’t understand technology, but I understand people. If Mark Zuckerberg believes in WhatsApp, that’s good enough for me,” the Oracle of Omaha had said.
But while Instagram—bought in 2012 for $1 billion—posted an estimated $51.4 billion in revenues in 2022 (per a Social App Report), WhatsApp brought in nearly $13 billion in 2022 (per AppMagic). The big difference between them lies in their monetisation models—which for Instagram, is mostly ad-based. Experts say that an encrypted messaging platform like WhatsApp isn’t favourable to ads.
It’s not as if WhatsApp has not tried; from charging users $1 per year, to launching WhatsApp Pay for which businesses would have to pay a flat fee of 3.99 per cent on every transaction, it has done it all, but to no avail. India, Meta’s happy hunting ground for pilot projects, too has disappointed WhatsApp in terms of monetisation, so far.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 29, 2023-Ausgabe von Business Today India.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 29, 2023-Ausgabe von Business Today India.
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