Skip to main content

Growth slows during Facebook’s ‘critical year,’ still reaches 2.5 billion

In the last three months, Facebook’s usually steep user growth didn’t change at all in the U.S. and fell in Europe following new data privacy laws. But during a second-quarter earnings report on Wednesday, July 25,  the social media giant shared a new number — there are 2.5 billion people using a Facebook-owned app, which also includes Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger, each month. The metric doesn’t double count users on multiple apps, such as people that are on both Facebook and Instagram.

The network shared the statistic for the first time this week during a report that posted slower revenue growth than anticipated while the company’s costs continue to jump. This year, the company has faced its largest privacy scandal yet while simultaneously working to make sure time on Facebook is “time well spent” and buckling down to combat abuse. Facebook expected that those changes would impact user counts and revenue, and true to the company’s predictions, both slowed during the second quarter of 2018.

Facebook’s newest statistic feels even more impressive considering 3 billion of the 4 billion world internet users are on social media. That means the company has the attention of more than 80 percent of social media users worldwide.

Facebook users now total 1.47 billion — that is still a growth over 2017, but the 11 percent growth is the slowest user growth that the network has seen since 2011. That’s also lower than last quarter’s growth after the Cambridge Analytica prompted a #deletefacebook hashtag. Facebook says the growth was driven by users in India, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Growth in the U.S. and Canada remained flat at about 185 million users. After the new General Data Protection Regulation privacy laws went into effect earlier this year, the user count in Europe fell by a million monthly active users. Despite those changes, Facebook says that a majority of users opted to allow the network to continue ad targeting to see more relevant ads at the cost of sharing data.

While Facebook predicted a slowdown when CEO Mark Zuckerberg called for the platform to make time spent on Facebook time well spent, Wall Street was more surprised by the results, with the company falling short of expectations and stock dropping by 20 percent as a result. Revenue decelerated by seven percent and the company predicts a similar “high single digit” rate throughout the remainder of 2018. Ad revenue, however, grew by 42 percent over 2017, with mobile ads now taking up 91 percent of the overall ad revenue.

At the same time, the company’s costs have increased by about 50 percent, with staff growing by 47 percent. That investment is largely for security as Facebook expands review staff. The network says that despite the investment in security, the network doesn’t plan on slowing the investment into developing new features.

The latest numbers may be bad news for investors, but Zuckerberg shared several changes implemented over the last few months designed both to curb abuse and to create less passive content consumption. The platform’s artificial intelligence for detecting graphic violence, for example, now catches 90 percent of the violence removed from the network. The network now has two new tools for ad transparency and has stepped up the fight against fake news by pushing known misinformation further down in the feed.

Editors' Recommendations

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
TikTok beats Facebook, Messenger in 2019 with over 700 million downloads
TikTok

Music video app TikTok soared to new heights in 2019 with more than 700 million downloads, beating Facebook and Messenger, and behind only WhatsApp's more than 850 million downloads.

According to the latest edition of Sensor Tower's Store Intelligence Data Digest, TikTok has steadily climbed the annual Top Apps chart. The music app was fourth in 2018 behind WhatsApp, Messenger, and Facebook, pushing Instagram to fifth place. Last year, TikTok went up two spots to second place, leapfrogging Messenger and Facebook, while WhatsApp retained its top spot.

Read more
WhatsApp will be ad-free because Facebook has a better plan to make money off it
WhatsApp

The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that Facebook has shelved its plan to bring ads to WhatsApp Status -- a monetization move that had seemingly been under development for about two years and was also reportedly responsible for the departure of both of the instant messaging app's original founders. The team tasked to figure out the most optimal method for incorporating ads inside the messaging app was broken up too, people familiar with the matter told the WSJ.

The report caught many by surprise. After all, WhatsApp has, on multiple occasions, confirmed that ads were coming to the app and even previewed what they will look like at the Facebook Marketing Summit last year. More importantly, Facebook earns most of its revenues from its ad network and expanding it to WhatsApp was one of the ways the social network was expected to cash in on its hefty $22 billion investment.

Read more
WhatsApp: Facebook shelves plan to fill app with ads, report claims
The WhatsApp logo.

WhatsApp's more than a billion users will be pleased to know they won’t be confronted with endless ads on the messaging app anytime soon.

Its parent company, Facebook, has backpedaled on its plan to incorporate ads into the app, people familiar with the matter told the Wall Street Journal this week.

Read more