But as WhatsApp, Messenger, and Instagram continue to grow, with monthly active user numbers swelling to 700 million, 600 million, and 300 million respectively, Facebook has proved that naysayers know nothing about what people want from the apps they use every day. Product chiefs of WhatsApp, Messenger, and Instagram took the stage at Facebook's annual F8 developers conference in San Francisco on Thursday to dispel any myths about rivalry between the three apps--and hinted deeper cooperation (or integration) could one day come.
On joining Facebook and competition
Joining Facebook was an easy decision, and not just because Mark Zuckerberg dropped some billions on the table. WhatsApp cofounder Brian Acton, Instagram cofounder Mike Krieger, and Facebook's David Marcus, vice president of messaging, said the infrastructure and talent Facebook provides makes it possible to improve the apps without worrying about servers or hiring the best engineers. The hard stuff is handled.
Acton said a key reason WhatsApp took Zuckerberg up on his offer was because of Instagram.
"We looked at it as a model for success," Acton said. "We were able to have the confidence that our partnership with Facebook would work well. We had an alignment of mission in terms of connecting the world's population."
Now that WhatsApp is in the Facebook fold, the network has two messaging apps that Zuckerberg hopes will reach a billion users apiece. So WhatsApp isn't concerned with Messenger's forays into payments and platform.
"We continue to develop our products independently," Acton said. "Platform is not top of mind for us. It's about building a simple, reliable and fast product. We share ideas, technologies, and infrastructure, but there's no strong competition."
Is it possible that Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp will eventually become a communication monolith, a feature-loaded app that lets you message friends, make restaurant reservations, and pay your rent without ever leaving Facebook Sure, but not any time soon.
"When the time comes, we'll do it in an intelligent and thoughtful fashion," Acton said.
On making new products
The reason the three apps remain on their own instead of being incorporated as features in the main Facebook app is concern about bloat. Instagram launched a new app, Layout, instead of folding a photo collage tool into its main app to avoid overloading Instagram with extras. Facebook was often criticized for cramming too many features into the big blue app, and so it started spinning off new ideas (and a few old ones) into stand-alone apps. That quest for simplicity is what also drives Instagram, Krieger said.
The same goes for Messenger, which opened its platform to third-party apps on Wednesday to give people options like GIFs and memes without adding a whole mess of features.
"We could've built a lot of those capabilities in Messenger and made it slower and less reliable, and we didn't want that," Marcus said. "We want messaging to be super fast, reliable and dependable, but at the same time want people to have those creative tools. Discovery is in Messenger but the content you share on Messenger isn't created in the app."
And developers aren't too happy about it, but WhatsApp's mission to make its app stable for every mobile platform around the world is keeping the company from releasing an API. There was some groaning in the crowd, but Acton stood his ground.
"We want to be careful about inundating people with messages they don't want," Acton said. "I receive emails from people on a routine basis who want to run their business with WhatsApp as the backbone of communication. We don't want to buzz a person's phone just because we can."