whatsapp’s killer feature was “no killer features, just a messaging app with number-bound IDs and good UI”. for anything like that I’d change, but the minute they add something like numberless IDs, or stickers, or a social media feature, they can fuck right off.
WhatsApp killer feature was “No paying for SMS ever, just your data bills”, which was much lower than SMS fees in many many countries, which also explains the popularity of WhatsApp outside of the USA and in many Asian countries.
And it was tied to your phone number instead of a login ID, so anyone with a WhatsApp sign up could interact anyone else who had it, instead of having to find your contacts again like with a new IM service.
It’s not a killer feature that they need, they need user base. There’s no reason for people to leave WhatsApp, as long as people can use it.
Here in Brazil, the only surges in Telegram popularity and actual usage where when WhatsApp was blocked countrywide, and even then we had several people downloading the shadiest VPNs out there just to log in on WhatsApp
Many have tried, many have failed.
You simply need a killer feature to get people to change.
Google’s tried a few times. Allo, hangouts, and probably others.
whatsapp’s killer feature was “no killer features, just a messaging app with number-bound IDs and good UI”. for anything like that I’d change, but the minute they add something like numberless IDs, or stickers, or a social media feature, they can fuck right off.
WhatsApp killer feature was “No paying for SMS ever, just your data bills”, which was much lower than SMS fees in many many countries, which also explains the popularity of WhatsApp outside of the USA and in many Asian countries.
And it was tied to your phone number instead of a login ID, so anyone with a WhatsApp sign up could interact anyone else who had it, instead of having to find your contacts again like with a new IM service.
WhatsApps main “killer feature” was being early in the market to quickly reach a critical user mass.
Doesn’t matter which competitor, people will install an alternative, see that only 5-10% of their contacts have it and will immediately uninstall.
I see potential in preinstalled messaging apps. But it needs to be cross-compatible between iOS and Android. Otherwise it won’t fly.
It’s not a killer feature that they need, they need user base. There’s no reason for people to leave WhatsApp, as long as people can use it.
Here in Brazil, the only surges in Telegram popularity and actual usage where when WhatsApp was blocked countrywide, and even then we had several people downloading the shadiest VPNs out there just to log in on WhatsApp