Wednesday 1 January 2014

The rise of Snapchat...and the decline of civilization


I remember reading an article back in 2008 about how Facebook, which at the time boasted around 100 million active users, was just a passing fad. Once the cool kids realized that everyone, including their own decidedly uncool parents, had signed up to Mark Zuckerberg’s creation, then they would soon cancel their accounts and go looking for their social media kicks elsewhere. In theory, this would happen in much the same way as when some hipper-than-thou teen turns their back on an obscure indie band for having the temerity to start selling records.

But for several years after I came across that dismissive article, Facebook continued on its meteoric rise, and garnered many more millions of users worldwide. It seemed the prediction that the cool kids—or Millennials, as they’re labeled in marketing and sociology circles—would desert Facebook in droves just didn’t hold much water. But then about a year ago, SnapChat appeared on the scene and quickly began stealing away Facebook users.

Snapchat is essentially a social network where users send video and photo messages which quickly disappear after they’re viewed. The concept seems absurd at first. But when you consider that many more images are now uploaded daily to the network than its rival Facebook, and that multi-billion dollar offers to buy the company have been batted away by its ridiculously young founders, then you have to start believing that Snapchat has real appeal.

It’s important to note this appeal lies mostly amongst 13 to 24 year-olds. Though claims of a growth in the 40+ year-old demographic probably alludes to the marketing and social media professionals who want to see what all the fuss is about. There are no official figures on members, but with Facebook reportedly shedding tens of millions of members each month, particularly in the same demographic and mostly in the United States and Europe, it’s not hard to guess where they’re going.

There are two main reasons for this trend.  When nearly everyone can see what you post, and it sits there forever exposed to the world, the chances are you’re being ridiculed by other kids not in your “offline” clique. Not to mention being monitored by your parents who have been on Facebook for three years along with your teachers, strangers, and even perverts who can see a lot more than you think due to Facebook’s complex privacy settings.

Facebook’s founder famously claimed in 2010 that privacy was dead. It seems the tide is turning on him, and the notion that people would willingly give up their private information. Even amongst older demographics, Facebook fatigue seems to be setting in, but still we keep our accounts as we become addicted to the cringe, shock, and simple nosiness that Facebook facilitates. Well, the cool kids are now saying hasta lavista, baby to Facebook, or whatever Millenials say these days.

The other reason for the rise of Snapchat could be related to a generational shift in values. Generation X and Baby boomers placed more value on material things that lasted, commemorated, and could ultimately be bequeathed to the next generation. Think silverware, fine china, properties, mink coats, and masses of photo albums. Today, relative to 20, 30 or 60 years ago, property ownership and the notion of a “job for life” are beyond the reach or imagination of most Millennials in the developed world. As “Selfie” was declared the word of 2013, narcissism and hedonism seem to be the primary values of many. A complete cynicism, and rightly so, towards politicians, corporations, and virtually all institutions has created a “lost” generation of self obsessed techies with the attention span of a gold fish. Global mass consumerism has meant that things and objects lose their value and simply become tools to experience life with, which may not be a bad thing in the long run, but it certainly shakes up some of the previous generations’ value systems.

The ephemeral nature of Snapchat reflects the younger generation’s disillusionment with the crumbling dream that my and the previous generation built and destroyed through greed and self interest. Of course every generation says that about the next, but no generation ever had anything akin to Snapchat

(First appeared in Venture magazine -January 2014)