The social network plans to build distinct app properties to give users new experiences on mobile. January 29, 2014 3:34 PM PST Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (Credit: James Martin/CNET) Looks like Instagram is the gift that keeps on giving. Not only did it jump start the company's transition into mobile when Facebook bought the photo sharing service for a billion dollars before going public in 2012, now it will be a model for a new direction at Facebook: standalone apps. The company seeks to build new mobile app offerings that will keep users plugged into Facebook properties. "Our theory is that there are all these different ways people want to communicate," Zuckerberg said, on a conference call with analysts to discuss quarterly earnings. He continued that the goal is to "build a handful of different experiences that people don't think of as Facebook." Related posts Facebook Q4 by the numbers: 1.23B members and $1.25B in mobile sales Facebook flying high with $2.59 billion in Q4 revenue Raising Alzheimer's awareness through Facebook confusion Facebook earnings: The kids are alright With NSA reform, what does more disclosure from tech firms mean? During the call, Zuckerberg mentioned different plans for growth over the next ten years. The standalone app initiative is the focus for the immediate future. "The 3-year plan is really all about building all kinds of new experiences for sharing," he said. The first signs of this new emphasis have been what the company has done with its Messenger app. Facebook separated it from the core mobile app so that users could differentiate it as its own property. "It gets room to breath and blossom," Zuckerberg said. Having different mobile apps also falls in line with the trend of users wanting to compartmentalize their sharing for different groups. The company even doubled down on private sharing when it introduced direct messages for Instagram in December. It's easy to see why Facebook would want to head in this direction. In the last quarter, for the first time, the company made the majority of its advertising revenue -- 53 percent -- on mobile. A bigger pie in that sense means more of an opportunity to grow its advertising business.

Posted by : Unknown Wednesday, January 29, 2014

The social network plans to build distinct app properties to give users new experiences on mobile.



January 29, 2014 3:34 PM PST



Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg


(Credit: James Martin/CNET)



Looks like Instagram is the gift that keeps on giving.

Not only did it jump start the company's transition into mobile when Facebook bought the photo sharing service for a billion dollars before going public in 2012, now it will be a model for a new direction at Facebook: standalone apps.


The company seeks to build new mobile app offerings that will keep users plugged into Facebook properties. "Our theory is that there are all these different ways people want to communicate," Zuckerberg said, on a conference call with analysts to discuss quarterly earnings. He continued that the goal is to "build a handful of different experiences that people don't think of as Facebook."



During the call, Zuckerberg mentioned different plans for growth over the next ten years. The standalone app initiative is the focus for the immediate future. "The 3-year plan is really all about building all kinds of new experiences for sharing," he said.

The first signs of this new emphasis have been what the company has done with its Messenger app. Facebook separated it from the core mobile app so that users could differentiate it as its own property. "It gets room to breath and blossom," Zuckerberg said.


Having different mobile apps also falls in line with the trend of users wanting to compartmentalize their sharing for different groups. The company even doubled down on private sharing when it introduced direct messages for Instagram in December.


It's easy to see why Facebook would want to head in this direction. In the last quarter, for the first time, the company made the majority of its advertising revenue -- 53 percent -- on mobile. A bigger pie in that sense means more of an opportunity to grow its advertising business.



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