New Delhi: WhatsApp’s prime head on Friday denied a Financial Times report that stated the Meta Platforms-owned messaging platform was exploring commercials because it sought to spice up income. The app is seen by some analysts as an untapped progress alternative, even years after Meta bought the platform for $19 billion in 2014 in its largest deal to this point.
The FT report stated groups at Meta had been discussing whether or not to point out advertisements in lists of conversations with contacts on the WhatsApp chat display, however no remaining choices had been made.
Meta was additionally deliberating whether or not it ought to cost a subscription payment to make use of the app ad-free, the report added, citing folks accustomed to the matter. “This @FT story is false. We aren’t doing this,” WhatsApp head Will Cathcart stated in a put up on social media platform X, previously often called Twitter.
WhatsApp has greater than 2 billion month-to-month energetic customers, in accordance with monetary knowledge agency Visible Alpha, however most of its income comes from its platform for small and medium-sized companies that’s utilized by about 200 million customers each month.
Meta doesn’t present WhatsApp’s income, however Visible Alpha estimates the messaging service generated $1.06 billion in gross sales final quarter, which represents a mere 3% of the social media firm’s whole income.
Zuckerberg stated final 12 months that WhatsApp and Messenger would drive the corporate’s subsequent wave of gross sales progress, with business messaging “probably going to be the next major pillar” of Meta.
Any transfer to incorporate advertisements on WhatsApp might show to be unpopular with customers. “Rolling out advertising on the messaging app could be a money maker but it would feel obtrusive and clunky,” stated AJ Bell analyst Danni Hewson.
“The speed at which the story has been refuted does suggest that Meta is aware how unpopular the move would be … it does look like a non-starter, for now,” Hewson added.
Source: zeenews.india.com