The Blitz
 
What  Facebook Will Look Like by 2024

 
 
By Todd Wasserman2014-02-04 11:07:10  UTC
Online empires come and go. At one time, Alta Vista was the top search 
engine  and Netscape was the only web browser. Both are now gone. Will the same 
happen  to _Facebook_ (http://mashable.com/category/facebook/) ? 
It's unlikely the company could completely exit the stage. However, the  
Facebook of 2024 will look very different from today's version. Primarily, the 
 company will continue to morph from a social network to a more traditional 
media  company.  
Several macro trends will likely drive that transformation,  including the 
ascendance of smaller private networks, emerging platforms and  growth in 
developing countries. 
Adapting to Mobile
The switch from desktop to mobile appears to have changed how people behave 
 on social media, or at least, how they define it.  
A few years ago, the conventional wisdom was that young people were  
exhibitionists at heart who had no reservations about sharing their data with  
the 
world. Mobile changed that. When you sit down at your computer to write, 
you  might expect your words and actions to be seen by the world. On mobile, 
though,  we're used to sending messages only to our closest friends and 
family.  Snapchat's success bolstered that view.  
In 2014, the narrative has evolved. Teens/mobile users are now perceived as 
 fiercely protective of their privacy.  
Simultaneously,  
 (http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#)  
(http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#)  
(http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#)  
(http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#) 
Facebook has become a  teen's version of LinkedIn
Facebook has become a  teen's version of LinkedIn — a network you have to 
join to participate in  the wider world, but a space that commands little 
attention. As research has  shown, twenty-somethings use Facebook a lot more 
than teens, and younger teens  use it less than older teens.  
As Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg _acknowledged_ 
(http://mashable.com/2014/01/15/zuckerberg-snapchat-privacy/) , Snapchat has 
addressed a  previously 
unstated need in the marketplace for more private social media  interactions. 
Zuckerberg reportedly made a _$3 billion unsuccessful bid for Snapchat_ 
(http://mashable.com/2013/11/13/snapchat-facebook-acquisition/)   after 
Facebook's would-be Snapchat killer, Poke, failed to gain traction.  
Facebook, which was caught flat-footed by the mobile revolution, has been  
proactively avoided falling behind again. Step one: Messenger, a mobile app  
released in August 2011. From the start, Messenger was too clunky to be  
considered a substitute for texting. And if someone wasn't your Facebook 
friend,  you couldn't message him or her. Facebook listened and adapted, 
though. 
The  company _addressed this issue late last year_ 
(http://newsroom.fb.com/News/753/Testing-a-New-Messenger-Experience-on-Android) 
, raising the 
question:  What is Facebook if not a means to connect you to your Facebook 
friends? 
Expect the question of "What is Facebook?" to linger. Once, the site stood  
for permanence and authenticity. Now the company is _ready to let users go 
anonymous_ 
(http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-01-30/facebook-turns-10-the-mark-zuckerberg-interview#p3)
  on some new Facebook-branded  apps. As 
Zuckerberg noted on his fourth quarter earnings call, the strategy for  2014 
is more apps, a kind of divide-and-conquer strategy for mobile that will  
provide disparate experiences, all brought you by Facebook.  
The first new step in this direction is Paper, a news aggregation app that  
the company introduced Monday, a day before its 10-year anniversary. 
The Next 10 Years
Looking ahead over the next few years, most envision a continued migration  
from desktop to phones and tablets. eMarketer predicts that, by 2017, some 
2.5  billion people will have smartphones, versus _1.75 billion_ 
(http://www.emarketer.com/Article/Smartphone-Users-Worldwide-Will-Total-175-Billion-2014
/1010536)  today.  
On that canvas,  
 (http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#)  
(http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#)  
(http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#)  
(http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#) 
Facebook will behave  like a media company, releasing apps with the 
Facebook imprimatur to address  new needs in the market. 
Facebook will behave  like a media company, releasing apps with the 
Facebook imprimatur to address new  needs in the market.  
Such needs will likely spread beyond phones and tablets and into wearable  
computing. Facebook is already on Google Glass. If smartwatches catch on,  
Facebook will want to be a forerunner as well.  
Facebook is a global company, though, and can't just cater its services to  
the rich. In June, I spoke with Facebook VP of Global Marketing Solutions, 
who  told me the company was putting a lot of focus on "the next billion," 
customers  who still use feature phones and live in developing countries.  
Last July, Facebook announced its _Facebook For Every Phone_ 
(http://mashable.com/2011/07/12/facebook-for-every-phone/)  app had hit 100  
million 
users. To reach the other 2.5 billion consumers around the world who  will have 
feature phones in 2017, the company will continue to offer that  
stripped-down experience.  
In other words, because of the growth of new mobile platforms and its 
growing  presence in the developing world, Facebook will package in many 
different forms.  
A Media Company
In its first 10 years, Facebook's primary appeal was its user base. There 
was  really no other reason to go on Facebook except to see your friends. 
Over the  next decade, as it competes with Twitter, Google+ and a host of 
up-and-coming  apps, Facebook will have to offer something more. 
One possibility is content creation. While the idea of Facebook-produced TV 
 shows may seem far-fetched, who would have guessed Amazon would be doing 
the  same? That's why, although Facebook _denies it_ 
(http://mashable.com/2014/01/30/facebook-paper-app-analysis/) , the company's 
move into news  
aggregation has made such a scenario more plausible.  
 (http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#)  
(http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#)  
(http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#)  
(http://mashable.com/2014/02/04/facebook-future/#) 
After all, now that Facebook  has hired editors, why not writers and, 
eventually,  actors?
After all, now that Facebook  has hired editors, why not writers and, 
eventually, actors? The company  is already _indirectly subsidizing_ 
(http://recode.net/2014/01/31/heres-how-facebook-rewards-celebrities-who-post-about-the-s
uper-bowl/)  actors and public figures who use the  social network to reach 
out to their fans.  
If such content creation seems familiar, look no further than Yahoo. With 
an  aging demo but huge reach, Facebook could easily become the Yahoo of the 
late  teens/early 20s set. Maybe sooner than that. Facebook wouldn't love 
the  comparison, of course, but things could be worse. Despite its troubles, 
Yahoo is  still powerful and viable.  
On the other hand, Facebook could do everything right and add another 
billion  or so customers, making it more of a counterbalance against Apple, 
Google and  Amazon. In such a scenario, Facebook probably wouldn't have any 
choice but to  expand into hardware and content to make its ecosystem viable. 
Since consumer  electronics ecosystems aren't mutually exclusive — most people 
participate in  Google's and Apple's to some degree these days — it will be 
harder to  differentiate oneself.  
For the average user, then, Facebook wouldn't have much different to offer, 
 except maybe for its content. Meanwhile its huge user base will be both a  
selling point and an obstacle.  
Much will be gained in such a scenario, but something will be lost, too. 
Just  as Google — another company that makes most of its money from 
advertising — is  becoming less synonymous with "search engine" and more with 
"huge 
and scary  media company," Facebook will shed its identity as a social 
network. That's a  contrast from how many see Facebook today, but not longer 
hugely 
off base.

-- 
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