And rather than some tiny gray text, Messenger uses your photos of your friends’ faces to show exactly who in the convo has seen. Facebook originally came up with the FacePile design about five years ago for a plugin that showed which of your friends Liked a website. Now it’s found to repurpose the design to let you know at a glance who has seen your messages.
The new Messenger design is now rolling out on iOS and Android in Europe and the US, and will go worldwide soon. What were really want is Messenger to feel like the fastest and most reliable mobile messaging product” Product Manager Lexy Franklin tells. “We've done a lot of work on performance on the backend, reducing end-to-end latency…to improve efficiency on all device types.” David Marcus, Facebook’s new head of Messenger and former PayPal president, explains speed is critical, saying “while most people don’t think about it, they can feel it”.
Facebook hopes doubling down on the core experience of chat will give it an edge as it fights a global war for messaging. WeChat, KakaoTalk, Kik, and more are all racing to be the quickest, slickest chat app. Simultaneously, Facebook has to fend off richer communication tools like Snapchat’s visual messaging, Line’s stickers, Google’s video chat, and Twitter’s worldwide town square.
Some of its competitors may try to squeeze money out of messaging directly, but after chatting with Marcus, it seems like Facebook’s strategy for now is to focus on utility that drives lock-in to its whole social platform. Facebook makes plenty of money from ads in its News Feed, it just needs to keep people bouncing around its blue and white apps. That’s the same reason Facebook launched “Stickered For Messenger”, a companion app for pasting stickers on top of photos and sending them to friends. It doesn't monetize directly, at least not yet, but if it can make people use Messenger more, they’ll probably use Facebook more, and see more ads.
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