Exactly one year ago, on the day when Facebook announced it was acquiring WhatsApp, I was commissioned by the Economic Times of India (#1 Pink Paper in India) to write my entrepreneurial view of the acquisition.
This was before the e-com / mobile app frenzy had reached dizzying heights as we see it today and people were frightened and shocked at the audacity of the price paid by FB.
I had argued FOR the acquisition and I think my points have played out well. Check out a quick recap and a 2015 perspective!
First a joke!
Fanta Singh was informed that Facebook had acquired WhatsApp (the messaging app) for 16 billion ‘daulars’. Fanta Singh was hard of hearing and did not believe his ears. He asked his friend to repeat, which he did: Facebook was paying 1 lac crores to buy WhatsApp.
On hearing this, Fanta Singh began to laugh hysterically! Later he said, “Arre, what a bewakoof (stupid) that Zuckerberg Paaji is! Does he have bhains buddhi (buffalo brains)? Why did he pay 1 lac crores for an app that is FREE?”
If you’ve had your laugh, let me also earn your respect.
A year ago, I was trying to get a peculiar sized table made. It was a square table that needed to be portable, light in weight and sturdy. After a couple of nerve-wracking sessions with my mom’s carpenter (who always has a 1 cm pencil stuck behind his ear), I was making no progress. The bidi-smelly fellow was just not getting it. In the end, he said, “Alok bhai, don’t worry. I will draw more pictures and send them to you by WhatsApp. You have WhatsApp naa?”
I was stunned.
The War over a Nation – Circa 2014
When Facebook closed the deal, WhatsApp had 450 million monthly users and was adding 1 million users a day! This places WhatsApp as the 3rd largest country in the world and if it continues to grow at the same pace, it will become the largest country in the world!
Now tell me, is US$ 16 billion too expensive to own the world’s largest country-in-the-making?
The biggest shocker in the deal announcement was the revelation that 70% of WhatsApp installed customers use the app every day! That’s 300 million people or the equivalent of the entire population of the USA daily marking attendance!
If I were to tell you that you could have control over this digital population, would you even bother negotiating a price? Would owning a nationality of citizens that have traditionally been the toughest to recruit, famous for being disloyal, fickle, inattentive and mostly inert, be temptation for anyone to resist?
World War I and II were fought by nations to control each other. World War III has begun. Only this time it is companies fighting over digital countries.
Circa – 2015 : WhatsApp has reported a 70 million daily active user base in India. In my opinion, that tops all digital media and also beats Google in India.
The Price of Paranoia
Steve Case is probably the greatest salesman ever born. He took his puny America Online Corporation (AOL) and sold it at an obnoxious, dizzying and spine-chilling price of US$ 160 Billion to the all and mighty Time Warner Corporation in the year 2000.
What was Steve Case selling and Time Warner buying? Pure, unadulterated, untouched PARANOIA.
Mark Zuckerberg revealed his paranoia when he publicly announced that, “WhatsApp is the only business in the world that had better retention and usage than Facebook.” Like Time Warner, Facebook has not understood what to do on all things mobile. It feels helpless and therefore makes wild, bold buys like Instagram (1 billion) WhatsApp (16 Billion), while failing to buy Snapchat for US$ 3 billion
Doubt in 2014: To pay an irrational, insane and obnoxious price to treat your paranoia that might not be true in the first place!
Today, in 2015, if a Flipkart that loses 1 Billion $$ a year is worth 15-20 US$ billion and a tween crazy app like Snapchat is worth 20 Billion, what is WhatsApp worth now?!
Consumer Revenues – Alternative revenue stream
For years Mark Zuckerberg said, “No ads on Facebook.” In the infamous movie ‘The Social Network’, his character avoids falling for Madison Avenue advertising revenue overtures that his now estranged co-founder was trying to garner.
Mr. Koum the founder of WhatsApp, is also very vocal about not having advertising as a revenue source. If you sign up for WhatsApp as a first time user, you will be treated to a “declaration of independence” – a long mobile page that berates advertising and its evils; and how the founders of WhatsApp vow never to pollute their beautiful products by ads.
Grump! So much for saying no to easy money!
So, a lot of people don’t get it. If advertising is bunk, then how will WhatsApp make money?
It’s the address book, silly!
Messaging services such as Japan’s LINE and Korea’s WeChat are demonstrating massive traction with in-app services for consumers such as stickers, gifts etc. Skype makes a ton of money by charging for premium services over its VOIP services.
It’s logical for WhatsApp to become a massive revenue generating monster from its consumer base who will pay a few cents here and there for tricks and treats.
And that suits Facebook very well that currently only depends on ads for revenue!
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What do you think of this deal? Please comment and share your opinion?
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Vikram Kohli
VOIP services(already got an invite saying try calling whatsapp) and in-app purchase is way forward. Read this article about we-chat few month ago. Here is the link :-https://www.mobileworldlive.com/tencents-wechat-hits-438m-active-use…
But how it will impact revenues of ISP like Airtel if WhatsApp has VOIP?
Sarsij Nayanam
When FB acquired WhatsApp, it had a monthly traction of 450 million users. Meaning, US $ 16 billion was to be earned back by Facebook month after month (in next few years), which comes out to be
(Amount Paid by Facebook)/(Total Number of Active User per month) = 16 billion / 450 million = US $ 35.55 per active user in a month.
Keeping the above fact aside. Now taking up another fact into consideration – WhatsApp will be always Ads-free.
One of the observation made on Facebook – A few months ago, Facebook was highlighting a video as – Trending Video on WhatsApp. (The same video where an UP Cadre lady IAS officer was in full flames and threatened the engineers of severe action against them.) This was insightful to me. Facebook has finally started using the trends generated from our ‘private’ social network to come out with suggestions on the ‘public’ social network. And I think this is going to be game changer for Facebook.
Facebook now has access to our closed-group private discussions and knows us completely well in terms of our mood fluctuations and the factors which influences us. Now imagine how effectively this data can be used on us to recover those $35 in next few years 🙂
I think it was an awesome bet for Facebook.
PS: A year ago, I was one of those common folks who thought that WhatsApp is being bought to be killed by Facebook in the months to come. It always appeared to be a over-priced purchase. I am glad I have been proved wrong 🙂
Nitish Mehta
I think we are neglecting Internet.org role here . what is your (Alok sir ) views ??