As advertising stalls, parent company Meta seeks to tap its messaging service's biggest market of 400 million monthly users to boost revenue
Hundreds of millions of WhatsApp users will now be able to discover, buy and pay for products and services through the chat app, its parent company Meta’s chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said in a video address at the company’s second Annual Conversations conference in Mumbai on Wednesday.
The move is significant as the Facebook owner is increasingly betting on business messaging in addition to its mainstay advertising to drive sales at the $775 million company.
Q. How is this different from the payments currently allowed on WhatsApp?
Currently WhatsApp allows for peer-to-peer payments through its app. However, Meta was increasingly seeing that India’s 400 million monthly WhatsApp users were not just turning to the messaging service to connect with family and friends, but also to “get things done” such as booking a cab, shopping for groceries, or buying from boutique and big businesses.
“[But] we haven’t made it easy to discover businesses or buy from them,” Zuckerberg said at a WhatsApp summit in Brazil last year. “As a result, people end up having to use work arounds.” Like chatting with a salesperson on his personal WhatsApp number, selecting a product based on pictures he sends and then logging out of WhatsApp to pay via Google Pay—WhatsApp Pay’s rival in digital payments.