Why Is WhatsApp Worth $19B? How Do Free Apps Make Money?

Ryan Barone
February 20, 2014

Some build apps for fun. Others for profit. No matter your interest in apps, here is something for you: Facebook just purchased WhatsApp…for $19 billion. $19 billion—yes, with a “b”!

What? Why? How Is It Possible For A Free App To Be Worth So Much Money?

WhatsApp wasn't always entirely free, but we will get to that later. Built to be a “better SMS alternative,” according to the company’s website (SMS stands for short message service; better known as text messaging), WhatsApp allows for cross-platform messaging – across the globe – with users not having to pay for the texts they send and receive. Instead, WhatsApp “uses the same internet data plan that you use for email and browsing.”

Sounds Cool. Sounds Neat. But Does It Sound Like $19 Billion?

Summarizing the details of a recent Forbes.com post, WhatsApp is worth the price tag to Facebook because: it will help the social network grow globally, it is the new SMS, it will be (and has already been) coveted by other companies, and it “is the only app we’ve ever seen with higher engagement than Facebook itself,” according to Mark Zuckerberg.

Moving away from WhatsApp in particular, and just looking at the transaction on a very basic level…$19 billion for an app; a little piece of software downloaded on your mobile device. What else could you buy for that sum of money instead?

How about the most valuable sports franchise in the world, Manchester United (valued at $2.23B by Forbes), along with Real Madrid ($1.88B), the New York Yankees ($1.85B), the Dallas Cowboys ($1.85B)…get the picture? It’s easier to wrap your head around the value of these teams. Man U has over 650 million fans, the Yankees own a piece of the most profitable regional sports network in the country. Value here is more tangible.

How Do Free Apps Make Money?

First, let's first look at apps in general. Most apps generate revenue through the following practices:

1. App Purchases

Just like other products, apps earn money when they are purchased. $.99 per purchase might not sound like a whole lot, but it adds up (Angry Birds sells for $.99, just saying). Then of course you look at an app like Minecraft: Pocket Edition that sells for $6.99 and made $1 million in iOS App Store revenue—on Christmas day alone.
Zuckerberg Quote WhatsApp
For WhatsApp specifically, the app used to cost about $1 to download...to some. Meaning, that price tag was only present in certain countries, and was dependent on the device you were using. Other users around the globe actually got to experience the app for free for year one, but then pay $1 for each year following. In 2016, WhatsApp scrapped the subscription fee altogether.

The whole "who pays and when; and why" was actually a bit confusing. For instance:

Before 2013, those on the iPhone had to pay $1 as a one-time fee to download and use the app.

It was then decided to put iPhone and Android users on the same level, making the app free for everyone, regardless of device, for the the first year, and then $1 per year to follow (while existing users were grandfathered into their existing one-time $1 fee; as long as they didn't change their phone number). On top of all of that, as mentioned, some countries were never subject to any fee.

2. The “Freemium” Model

Even "free apps" or those that are free to download can still make money, and lots of it. This freemium model allows users to download the app without charge, but will then charge for extra features, lives, power-ups, and other in-game resources. Think Candy Crush and Clash of Clans, and even the newer version of Words with Friends.

3. Advertisements

You’ve probably noticed advertisements on your favorite apps. (How can you ignore them?) Just like ads on social networks, in magazines, on TV, etc. companies pay for their products and services to be seen within mobile apps. While WhatsApp hasn't yet cashed in on this tactic, other SMS apps, like WeChat, which is well known in China, has both apps and online games. With only 440 million users, WeChat turned in $924 million in revenue in 2014's third quarter.

All of that said, it still doesn't add up; literally.

All of this considered, there is one big thing missing. I mean, even if WhatsApp earned $1 per download on iOS and $1 per year on other platforms (and not even for every user), and had a large user base, the company’s revenue might have only been hundreds of millions of dollars at the time of purchase. Thus, there is a large, unfilled gap between hundreds of millions and $19 billion.

But, maybe, it doesn't have to add up.

So, how can apps sell for so much if they don't generate revenue? Or, how do apps sell for so much more than the revenue they do generate?

In WhatsApps case, it was acquired for billions because that is how much the app was worth to Facebook. 450 million users at the time of purchase, growth opportunity, future prospects, behavioral data, contact lists, keeping the app out of the hands of competitors. All of these things have a price tag. And a hefty one, it appears.
Sports Franchise Values 2017
Thus, valuation here doesn't stem from past, current, or even near future revenue prospects. The app had millions (now a billion plus users). Such volume opens the door for revenue, at some point, in some form.

It's not about how the app makes money now. It's about whether or not it can make money when the right monetization strategy is rolled out—with said strategy hinging on a high volume of users, which WhatsApp has. That is, if a monetization strategy is even ever rolled out; the app can still be hugely valuable without making money itself.

If the time comes, Facebook can look at the WeChat and Line revenue models as outlined here.

What Does The Future Hold?

If I had such a future-telling capability, I'd probably consider using it on something other than predicting WhatsApp's next move. But, it's fun to think about.

Above all else, growth prospects are tremendous. As with most apps, and especially with a messaging app, one person in a group of friends downloads, then the rest follow. Then, the social groups of those people all take to adoption, and so on as the app branches out from one group to the next. Taking both the app's existing and quickly expanding user bases into consideration, WhatsApp is primed for profiting—again, if and when the time comes.

So, just something to keep in mind when building your own apps. There are many ways to get compensated for your creations, but who knows the value others will place on them.

View online coding courses at iD Tech, or view tips on how parents can get started with teaching coding to kids.

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