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Is the era of ad-free social media here?

Rachyl Jones
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Rachyl Jones
Rachyl Jones
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Rachyl Jones
By
Rachyl Jones
Rachyl Jones
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October 3, 2023, 2:08 PM ET
Meta, TikTok, and other social media platforms have moved to offer ad-less paid subscriptions to their services.
Meta, TikTok, and other social media platforms have moved to offer ad-less paid subscriptions to their services.David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Hi all, it’s Rachyl Jones, a fellow on the tech team filling in for David today. Within the last 24 hours, news has surfaced that some of the most popular social media platforms could soon offer an ad-free option for users, upending the business model that social networks have relied on for the better part of two decades. 

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TikTok is testing a $4.99 per month subscription plan that would eliminate ads for users, Android Authority first reported on Monday. The short-form video platform confirmed it will pilot the option in an English-speaking market outside the U.S. Following the news, the Wall Street Journal reported Instagram and Facebook are eyeing a similar model in the E.U. Parent company Meta reportedly pitched the subscription option to regulators, who are increasingly trying to limit the company’s ability to serve targeted ads. A single Facebook or Instagram account on desktop would cost 10 euros ($10.50) per month, with each additional account tacking on 6 euros ($6.30). On mobile, the price would jump to a monthly 13 euros ($13.60) for one profile, to account for cuts taken by Apple’s and Google’s app stores, the Journal reported. 

TikTok and Meta rely heavily on advertising to make money. Last year, 97% of Meta’s $117 billion in revenue came from ads. Shifting towards a paid, ad-free option could ease regulatory pressures and boost revenue, depending on how many users opt-in. The reports also emphasize a growing trend towards offering multiple tiers of service to users. Snapchat and X, formerly Twitter, offer paid subscriptions, though neither comes with a totally ad-free viewing experience (X owner Elon Musk has also indicated his desire to convert X to a subscription-only service, but has not provided any details).

With tests and proposals focused outside the U.S., the prospect of ad-less scrolling in the states appears slim for now. Companies might be reluctant to loosen their grasp on the U.S.’s huge advertising market. TikTok and Instagram don’t report regionalized ad revenue, but for Meta, the U.S. is the big moneymaker. Despite the segment of the U.S. and Canada having fewer active users than other regions Meta measures, including Europe and Asia-Pacific, it contributes more than twice the revenues of these other areas, according to its 2022 annual report. 

On the consumer side, the continually increasing number of ads on social media has led to some frustrations. Coupled with an increased focus on privacy from many users, the demand for a paid subscription plan is clear. How effective these tiers will be in solving these issues, however, is yet to be determined. 

For companies to make the option worthwhile, they must charge the equivalent of what it makes off individual users by serving them ads. In the fourth quarter of 2022 (Meta’s best quarter of the year), the average revenue per user in the U.S. and Canada was $58.77, which works out to be roughly on par with the $20 a month that Meta is reportedly considering charging for a Facebook and Instagram mobile account. As far as we know though, Meta isn’t thinking of offering the subscription plan to U.S. users; it wants to roll it out for users in Europe, where the average revenue per user in Q4 was $17.29, or roughly $5.76 per month. By that measure, at least, Meta’s move to paid subscriptions could be financially beneficial. 

The question then becomes how high the ceiling is—in other words, how much room is there in the long term for Meta to raise the price it charges for a monthly subscription compared to how high its advertising revenue could grow?

Rachyl Jones

Want to send thoughts or suggestions to Data Sheet? Drop a line here.

NEWSWORTHY

An unlikely pairing. Taiwanese technology companies are helping China’s Huawei build a network of secret chip plants across southern China, Bloomberg reports. As China continues to threaten military force against Taiwan over its independence, the cooperation risks igniting political disputes on the island as the presidential election approaches.  

Apple’s China policy. Apple is now requiring developers to prove their new apps uploaded to the Chinese App Store have the proper licenses from the Chinese government, according to Reuters. App creators must have a company in China or partner with a local one to obtain a license. Apple’s new policy could limit its offerings in the country, and it comes as China increases oversight of app stores.

More money, same product. Netflix is planning to raise the price of its $15.49 per month ad-free tier in the months after the ongoing Hollywood actors strike ends, the Wall Street Journal reported. The expected price hike comes alongside increases across the streaming industry.

ON OUR FEED

“The main job requirement is they don’t mind DocuSigning at 3 a.m.”

—FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, as quoted by author Michael Lewis in his new book Going Infinite, regarding to the three board members of the crypto company, two of whom he was unable to name, per the New York Times

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

Warren Buffett-backed BYD is just over 3,000 cars away from overtaking Tesla as the world’s biggest seller of EV cars, by Nicholas Gordon

Sam Bankman-Fried’s trial starts today. Here’s everything you need to know, by Leo Schwartz

LinkedIn unveils platform for recruiters that uses AI to find better candidates faster, by Paige McGlauflin and Joseph Abrams 

Jamie Dimon says the next generation of employees will work 3.5 days a week and live to 100 years old, by Eleanor Pringle

Netflix made zero dollars from popular ‘Wednesday’ merchandise—now it wants to fix that mistake, by Paige Hagy

BEFORE YOU GO

Meta is down a Brown. Campbell Brown, Meta’s vice president of global media partnerships, is leaving the company, Axios reported on Tuesday. Formerly a television anchor and host for NBC and CNN, Brown led Meta’s news partnerships team, which was created to collaborate with publishers around the world at a time when Meta prioritized disseminating news stories. Brown will continue consulting for the company, according to Axios. 

The departure marks a symbolic end to Meta’s news business, which has been dying a slow death for some time. The company has been increasingly parting with news by cutting funding for U.S. publishers and limiting the number of news articles that appear on user feeds, resulting in part from regulatory pressure around censorship.

This is the web version of Data Sheet, a daily newsletter on the business of tech. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.

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Rachyl Jones
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