Over the past few years, Chinese app maker ByteDance has become the world’s most valuable start-up, with a valuation of $75 billion. That meteoric rise was fueled by the growth of its short video app TikTok, its news aggregator app Jinri Toutiao, and other apps aimed at China’s Gen Z users.
<p class="canvas-atom canvas-text Mb(1.0em) Mb(0)–sm Mt(0.8em)–sm" type="text" content="Chinese tech giants Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent all consider ByteDance a disruptive threat in China. However, ByteDance’s flagship app TikTok, which lets users create short lip-syncing videos, is also gaining ground against Facebook (NASDAQ: FB) and Alphabet‘s (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) Google in overseas markets.” data-reactid=”12″>Chinese tech giants Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent all consider ByteDance a disruptive threat in China. However, ByteDance’s flagship app TikTok, which lets users create short lip-syncing videos, is also gaining ground against Facebook (NASDAQ: FB) and Alphabet‘s (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) Google in overseas markets.
Image source: Getty Images.
<p class="canvas-atom canvas-text Mb(1.0em) Mb(0)–sm Mt(0.8em)–sm" type="text" content="ByteDance clearly has its sights set on those two tech giants. In February, it hired Vanessa Pappas, the former global head of creative insights at YouTube, as TikTok’s first general manager in the U.S. It also recently hired Blake Chandlee, Facebook’s VP of global partnerships, as TikTok’s head of strategic partnerships. Those hires are aimed at expanding TikTok’s global presence, and the numbers indicate that Facebook, Google, and other tech companies need to pay attention.” data-reactid=”25″>ByteDance clearly has its sights set on those two tech giants. In February, it hired Vanessa Pappas, the former global head of creative insights at YouTube, as TikTok’s first general manager in the U.S. It also recently hired Blake Chandlee, Facebook’s VP of global partnerships, as TikTok’s head of strategic partnerships. Those hires are aimed at expanding TikTok’s global presence, and the numbers indicate that Facebook, Google, and other tech companies need to pay attention.
TikTok by the numbers
TikTok was formed from the merger of two apps, Douyin (which it’s still called in China) and Musical.ly. In less than three years TikTok’s monthly active user base grew to over 500 million, making it the world’s fourth-largest social platform after Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram.
TikTok was the most downloaded non-game iOS app worldwide last year according to Sensor Tower. YouTube ranked second, followed by Facebook’s WhatsApp, Instagram, and Messenger.
TikTok was also the fourth most downloaded non-game app on Google Play. WhatsApp, Messenger, and Facebook held the top three positions. YouTube ranked 10th, but it probably wasn’t downloaded as much because it’s pre-installed on many Android devices.
<p class="canvas-atom canvas-text Mb(1.0em) Mb(0)–sm Mt(0.8em)–sm" type="text" content="ByteDance is trying to lock users into Douyin by launching Mini Programs (similar to the ones found in Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent’s apps) for games, purchases, and other services. It’s also expanding TikTok’s ecosystem with other linked apps, including the video chat app Duoshan, the messaging app Flipchat (with integrated mobile payments from Alibaba-backed Alipay), and the work collaboration platform Lark.” data-reactid=”30″>ByteDance is trying to lock users into Douyin by launching Mini Programs (similar to the ones found in Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent’s apps) for games, purchases, and other services. It’s also expanding TikTok’s ecosystem with other linked apps, including the video chat app Duoshan, the messaging app Flipchat (with integrated mobile payments from Alibaba-backed Alipay), and the work collaboration platform Lark.
Image source: Getty Images.
ByteDance still owns other established apps like Jinri Toutitao, which serves over 120 million daily active users, the overseas news aggregator platform News Republic, and the short video platform Xigua. The combination of all these apps makes ByteDance a formidable opponent for its domestic and overseas rivals.
Facebook notices the threat, Google looks the other way
<p class="canvas-atom canvas-text Mb(1.0em) Mb(0)–sm Mt(0.8em)–sm" type="text" content="Facebook, which hasn't been shy about cloning features from Tencent’s WeChat and Snap‘s Snapchat, already identified TikTok as a growing threat last year. That’s why it launched a TikTok clone called Lasso in the U.S. last November.” data-reactid=”49″>Facebook, which hasn’t been shy about cloning features from Tencent’s WeChat and Snap‘s Snapchat, already identified TikTok as a growing threat last year. That’s why it launched a TikTok clone called Lasso in the U.S. last November.
But Lasso never caught on. In February, Sensor Tower reported that only about 70,000 U.S. users had downloaded Lasso since its launch, compared to 39.6 million U.S. users who downloaded TikTok during the same period.
Facebook will likely kill off Lasso, but it will still probably launch more TikTok clones — just as it repeatedly launched Snapchat clones (like Poke, Slingshot, Lifestage, and Flash) before it settled on using Instagram as its main Snapchat competitor. It could also integrate more TikTok-like features, like music, lip-syncing, and video effects, into Instagram to widen its moat against ByteDance.
Google hasn’t publicly reacted to TikTok’s growth yet, likely because it thinks TikTok’s short videos don’t compete against YouTube’s longer videos. However, TikTok could still lure away YouTube’s broadcasters and viewers, especially in the fickle Gen Z market.
The bottom line
ByteDance probably won’t directly hurt Facebook or Google by poaching their talent. But it indicates that the world’s most valuable start-up has international ambitions — and it could eventually lure away some of Facebook and Google’s younger users.
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