LONDON, July 7, 2015 /PRNewswire/ --
New research by GlobalWebIndex reveals the major effect that the growth of mobile instant messaging (IM) users are having on other forms of mobile communications.
(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150706/231115 )
(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150706/231116 )
(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150706/231118 )
(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150706/231185 )
In its Q2 Mobile Messaging Report, GlobalWebIndex found that many of the conversations and behaviors that used to take place on "traditional" social networks like Facebook are being absorbed by the likes of Snapchat, WhatsApp and WeChat.
The full research report is downloadable on request via media@globalwebindex.net with some of the key findings given below:
Drop in usage by 11% for SMS and 17% for MMS
Facebook's WhatsApp and Messenger knocked from top spot in 8/33 countries surveyed, with the heaviest losses occurring in the APAC region
16-34s dominate instant messaging, and teens love Snapchat:
Facebook Messenger & WhatsApp dominate, outside of China
Of all the social networks, Instagrammers are the most likely to use chat apps
WeChat clear leader in the Chinese market
About the Research
All figures in the release are drawn from GlobalWebIndex's Q1 2015 wave of research among 47,622 internet users aged 16-64 across. The data was collected in March and April via an online questionnaire.
For messaging apps, Active Usage is measured via the question: "Which of the following mobile/tablet applications have you used in the past month? (on any device)"
About GlobalWebIndex
GlobalWebIndex is the world's largest ongoing multi-market research study into the digital consumer, annually interviewing 200,000 unique individuals across 34 markets representing 90% of the global internet population. The data collected provides the most detailed and up to date insight on attitudes, motivations, digital brand communications and multi-platform internet behaviours in the market. GlobalWebIndex's clients include Google, Twitter, Microsoft, Group M, Omnicom Media Group, Starcom MediaVest, ZenithOptimedia, Digitas, R/GA, AKQA, Sony, Unilever and Samsung.
Share this article