Events & Resources

Learning Center
Read through guides, explore resource hubs, and sample our coverage.
Learn More
Events
Register for an upcoming webinar and track which industry events our analysts attend.
Learn More
Podcasts
Listen to our podcast, Behind the Numbers for the latest news and insights.
Learn More

About

Our Story
Learn more about our mission and how EMARKETER came to be.
Learn More
Our Clients
Key decision-makers share why they find EMARKETER so critical.
Learn More
Our People
Take a look into our corporate culture and view our open roles.
Join the Team
Our Methodology
Rigorous proprietary data vetting strips biases and produces superior insights.
Learn More
Newsroom
See our latest press releases, news articles or download our press kit.
Learn More
Contact Us
Speak to a member of our team to learn more about EMARKETER.
Contact Us

Can Meta transform WhatsApp into a super app?

The news: Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Thursday mapped out a super app-like vision for WhatsApp that would enable consumers in Brazil to find, message, and buy something from a business all within the same chat.

  • “The ultimate goal here is to make it so you can find, message, and buy from a business all in the same WhatsApp chat,” he said.
  • The in-app end-to-end shopping would mirror the experience WhatsApp launched with JioMart in India this August, but in Brazil it is working with multiple payment partners.
  • The timing of the plan is significant given that Meta is at a critical juncture. Its main revenue source, advertising, is declining; our newly updated forecast sees the company’s ad revenues dropping 3.7% in the US this year. Yet even though we expect its ad revenues to rise in 2023, the company’s two-year annualized growth will come to less than 1%.

Monetization is hard: The move to transform WhatsApp represents a major effort by Meta to monetize a significant resource that until now has generated relatively small revenues—though how the company plans to generate revenue from the feature remain hazy.

  • Meta paid $22 billion for the platform in 2014, making it the company’s most expensive acquisition. Yet messaging across Facebook's apps pulled in a relatively paltry $218 million in the most recent quarter, driven by paid messaging on WhatsApp, per Insider. That’s not even a rounding error for a company that generated nearly $29 billion in total revenues.
  • But as the company looks for growth opportunities, it can’t help but daydream about transforming WhatsApp into a WeChat-like super app. WeChat has 820.2 million users in China, per our forecast, and its mini-program economy was estimated last year to be valued at $240 billion, with 450 million users transacting through the program.
  • Those eye-popping numbers help explain why Meta has made several strategic investments and updates to its platforms aimed at bolstering chat-based commerce revenues.

The big takeaway: Amid Meta’s current challenges with advertising, it is hardly surprising to see it reimagine WhatsApp as a super app that consumers turn to for everything from messaging to commerce.

  • While conversational commerce has not gained traction in the United States and Europe, Meta is wise to see if it can gain a foothold in Brazil, India, and other markets.
  • If those efforts prove successful, conversational commerce could provide a fresh revenue stream for Meta and, at the same, shield it from some of the detrimental impact that Apple’s privacy changes have had on its advertising business.

Go further: Read our Future of Meta report.

This article originally appeared in Insider Intelligence's Retail & Ecommerce Briefing—a daily recap of top stories reshaping the retail industry. Subscribe to have more hard-hitting takeaways delivered to your inbox daily.

You've read 0 of 2 free articles this month.

Create an account for uninterrupted access to select articles.
Create a Free Account