Why one of the most popular apps in the world may finally be poised to take off in the US
WhatsApp is already the most popular way to message friends and family outside the U.S.—and it's beginning to challenge iMessage's blue bubble supremacy within the States.
Collabstr analyzed data from Pew Research and DataReportal to illustrate WhatsApp's grip on internet users outside of the U.S. The analysis uses the World Bank's country income groupings. Middle-income countries include India, the Philippines, Lebanon, Nicaragua, Mexico, Brazil, China, and dozens of others.
In 2023, across middle-income countries, Pew polling found that WhatsApp and Facebook were the most used media sites. WhatsApp has nearly 3 billion active users globally. Pew Research data indicates, however, that only 29% of U.S. adults are on the platform.
Recent reports suggest that may change as Americans discover its universality and as WhatsApp rolls out new features such as stickers and custom chat themes that can be more appealing to users. WhatsApp was the sixth-most downloaded app in the U.S. in 2023, seeing a 5% increase over the previous year, according to analytics firm Apptopia.
Statements from Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg shared on the platform back up Pew's estimates. According to Zuckerberg, nearly 1 in 3 people living in the U.S. use WhatsApp. The platform recently crossed the 100 million active monthly user mark in the U.S. at the end of July.
The push to attract more users in the U.S. market comes as Meta is also becoming more open-minded about breaking down walls between its apps and those of its competitors. The social media company recently made Threads, Meta's X (formerly Twitter) competitor, compatible with the fediverse. The fediverse is a shared protocol that connects different social media networks that opt in. Networks like Threads, Mastodon, and Bluesky opting in can read posts and follow users on different fediverse apps regardless of the app or device used.
It's a tactic Apple hasn't been willing to adopt as it maintains a suite of services only available to iPhone and Mac users. Apple continues to dominate the U.S. phone market: Over 60% of smartphones sold in the U.S. are iPhones, according to market research firm Counterpoint.
But outside the U.S., where Android dominates the phone market, WhatsApp has a sizable hold on smartphone users.
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