Tuesday, November 7, 2017

A company in turmoil. Why Snapchat is Wall Street’s new Twitter

By Mark Schaefer

Over time, I have often gone against the grain of conventional wisdom. It’s not easy taking a contrarian position in this field, but more often than not, I have been right:

  • I predicted Google Plus would not go mainstream the first week it was introduced (while others predicted it would kill Facebook).
  • I said we would not be having a Quorgasm after techno-guru Robert Scoble predicted Quora would be so big that it would replace blogging.
  • I said to forget about QR codes when people were enthusiastically slapping them on everything in sight.
  • And most recently, I did not join the chorus of … well everyone … who went ga-ga over Snapchat. I pointed out in early posts on Snapchat that it was boxed-in by Facebook. They had no significant intellectual property that Facebook couldn’t copy — and they have — meaning their user growth was going to be limited.

That is exactly what is happening, as evidenced by today’s earnings announcement in the Wall Street Journal. Facebook has crushed Snapchat’s user growth:

Snap said its quarterly loss more than tripled, disappointing Wall Street again as it failed to significantly grow the number of people using its app daily or the amount of money advertisers are spending to reach those users.

For its third straight quarterly earnings report as a publicly traded company, it failed to live up to Wall Street’s forecasts for revenue. Snap, the parent company of the messaging app Snapchat, said revenue in the third quarter rose 62% to $207.9 million. Analysts polled by FactSet expected $236.9 million in revenue.

Snap’s quarterly loss widened to $443.2 million. Shares were down 18% in after-hours trading.

Like Twitter, Wall Street is hammering Snapchat for its stalled growth (although Twitter had a spike in their last quarterly announcement). But even worse, Snap’s strategy seems to be in a state of chaos.

  • Recently Snap announced earlier this year that it is really a “camera company.” Please take a look at the new iPhone and the breath-taking developments with smartphones and tell me why the world needs another camera.
  • Their goofy looking glasses product has been a flop. By Snap’s admission, the company has only sold 150,000 units, and hundreds of thousands of units are now sitting in warehouses, either whole or in parts.
  • More recently, it announced Snapchat is a fitness app?  Huh?

Snap is a company that appears to be in panic mode.

Snapchat is a wonderful platform that owns the hearts and minds of a generation. There is a tremendous amount of value there. But with a tanking stock price and a strategy that is in disarray, it is primed for a takeover.

Maybe Mark Zuckerberg will come knocking again?

Mark Schaefer is the chief blogger for this site, executive director of Schaefer Marketing Solutions, and the author of several best-selling digital marketing books. He is an acclaimed keynote speaker, college educator, and business consultant.  The Marketing Companion podcast is among the top business podcasts in the world.  Contact Mark to have him speak to your company event or conference soon.

Illustration marked safe for re-use by Unsplash.com

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