The problem that might actually hurt Facebook

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Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Without younger users, Facebook could be in big trouble

Former Facebook (FB) employee Frances Haugen fired up lawmakers, parents, and likely many others by leaking a trove of seemingly damning internal company documents to various media outlets.

But Facebook’s biggest existential threat doesn’t have anything to do with most of the revelations in those documents, such as the company’s inability to stop hate speech, violence, or even human trafficking on its website. You know, things that would likely sink any other company.

Instead, Facebook could finally be hurt because young people don’t like using Facebook — and the company appears to know that’s a sore spot.

“We are retooling our teams to make serving young adults their north star, rather than optimizing for the larger number of older people,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg said during the company’s Q3 earnings call.

FILE - In this April 11, 2018, file photo, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg takes a drink of water as he testifies before a House Energy and Commerce hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington. Reports of hateful and violent speech on Facebook poured in on the night of May 28 after President Donald Trump hit send on a social media post warning that looters who joined protests following Floyd's death last year would be shot, according to internal Facebook documents shared with The Associated Press. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)
FFacebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

According to documents Haugen took on her way out the door at Facebook, and leaked to a consortium of journalists, Facebook is hemorrhaging younger users, who are increasingly ignoring the platform for competing services.

The documents show, according to Bloomberg, that Facebook saw a 16% year-over-year decline in the time teens spent using the platform from 2020 to 2021. The amount of time young adults, those between 18 and 29 years old, were using the platform, meanwhile, fell 5%. On the flip side, people over 30 spent more time on Facebook in the same time period.

But Facebook covets younger users far more than older folks posting pictures of their grandkids. That's partly because younger people are less likely set in their ways in terms of brand preferences, something advertisers look to exploit. What's more, if Facebook snags people early, it has potential users for life.

“Once you start putting things onto one platform, and you maximize that amount of content on that platform, now moving to a different platform creates extremely high switching costs,” University of Chicago Booth School of Business Professor Pradeep Chintagunta told Yahoo Finance in a previous interview.

“All the birthdays that I keep track of are already on the platform. If I have to move to a different platform, then it's going to be quite costly for me to recreate that entire experience.”

But to do that, Facebook has to find a way to make its main app attractive to younger users again.