In quite the turnaround, it seems Facebook is gaining
popularity with young users again.
Forrester Research surveyed 4,517 teens, between the
ages of 12 and 17, about social media usage and nearly half said that they were
using Facebook more than a year ago.
The survey, first reported by the WSJ, pinpoints smartphone adoption as one of the biggest
reasons for the increased Facebook usage, not necessarily their adoration of
the platform.
Just last October, Facebook admitted a “decrease in daily
users among younger teens,” and several research outlets, such as the Pew
Research Center supported this admission.
The Pew study found many teens expressing “waning
enthusiasm” for Facebook. Reports like this and Facebook’s acknowledgement has
sent the wrong message to marketers, at least according to Nate Elliot,
co-author of the Forrester Research report.
Perhaps this is why Facebook launched Slingshot, an app mimicking Snapchat where users
are forced to create content to view their friend’s video or photo messages,
last week to reignite the spark with its younger audience.
But the problem might
just be with Facebook and its efforts to lure a group that wants no part
of it.
Slingshot has fallen behind the app Yo, which sends the message
“Yo” to a friend. Yo, released on April Fools Day, is ranked 19 on the top
charts list in the App Store as of writing and Slingshot is not even on the
chart.
This is an example of Facebook’s failure to attract a group
that might never again find it attractive. Some people will never find
Facebook cool, and Facebook’s growth into a massive corporation has contributed
to that.
However, that hasn’t stopped Facebook adoption from being
higher than every other social network apart from YouTube, according to the
survey. Perhaps this adoption stems from Facebook’s wide reach that teens feel
pressured or find it practical to sign up.
As the Pew study highlights, joining Facebook at a young age
feels “lame” because of presence of adults.
“They dislike the increasing number of adults on the site,
get annoyed when their Facebook friends share inane details, and are drained by
the “drama” that they described as happening frequently on the site,” the Pew
study found.
The Forrester research presents different numbers from other
research outlets, but there is a strong possibility that those numbers will dip
again. For all generations, at a certain point, it will always be uncool to be
where your parents are — and they’re on Facebook.
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