Facebook boosts ‘stories’ format, now open to ads

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Facebook boosts ‘stories’ format, now open to ads
Facebook will now be putting ads on its 'Stories' format after having hit 300 million daily users

NEW YORK, USA – Facebook said Wednesday it now has 300 million daily users of “stories,” a format inspired by Snapchat, and would now begin delivering ads with these visual messages.

The announcement shows Facebook is making strides in this new format which allows people to share videos or photos with emojis and augmented reality options that could allow users to draw eyeglasses or hats on faces, and which disappear after 24 hours.

“Starting today Facebook Stories ads will be available to advertisers around the world,” a statement from the world’s biggest social network said as it made the announcement at a New York media event.

“Advertising in stories has proven to drive valuable business outcomes.”

Facebook, which at one point sought to acquire Snapchat to tap into the market for younger users, began using the stories format in 2016 on Instagram and in 2017 extended that to Facebook and Messenger users.

According to the company, 400 million Instagram users employ the stories format in addition to the 300 million in the Facebook platform, with a large number using both platforms.

The move by Facebook appears to be having an impact on Snapchat, according to analysts.

Earlier this month, the research firm eMarketer revised down its revenue estimates for Snapchat by 36%, predicting $662.1 million in net digital ad revenues, compared with an estimated $1.03 billion projected in March.

Although Snapchat is the most popular application for teens, its worldwide user base fell by around two million in the second quarter, according to eMarketer.

Snapchat reported 188 million active users in the second quarter.

Facebook said that as of next week, users will be able to add music to stories, as part of an agreement with major music labels. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!