Snapchat

Snap Stock Surges On User, Revenue Growth; Calls Out ‘Nikita Unfilitered’ For 20 Million Views

Snap reported encouraging revenues and user growth yesterday, due in no small part to social distancing and lockdown protocols amid the coronavirus pandemic. Wall Street liked the company’s latest quarterly earnings report so much that shares in the company rose 20% yesterday, Reuters reports.

All told, Snapchat’s daily active users rose 20% year-over-year to 229 million in Q1 2020. Last quarter, Snapchat reported 218 million daily active users, and analysts were projecting 225 million for its most recent report, according to Reuters, which it exceeded. Additionally, revenues increased 44% year-over-year to $462.47 million last quarter, Snap said — though growth in Jan. and Feb. was offset by tightened ad spending in March, when the coronavirus began to wallop the states with a broader sweep.

In addition to using Snapchat as a communication tool, the company said viewership of original content and use of its in-app games also increased. Nikita Dragun

, for instance, a beauty vlogger who headlined a docuseries called Nikita Unfiltered, announced last night that her series is the biggest show in Snapchat history, with 20 million views since its launch on March 21. (Snap also called out the impressive stat for the show in a press release).

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

Additionally, Snapchat said that its new quarantine-themed Will Smith original, Will From Home, has garnered over 15 million viewers across its first three episodes.

On a call with analysts, Snap CEO Evan Spiegel said that direct response ads — or ads that are designed to encourage consumers to take immediate action — were a bright spot last quarter, and now comprise more than half of Snap’s total revenues. And small and medium-sized businesses, who have been hit particularly hard by the pandemic — and are thus likely to pull ad spend as a cost-saving measure — are a smaller portion of Snap’s direct responses business, added chief business officer Jeremi Gorman.

Going forward, in light of the pandemic, Snap plans to shift resources on its ad sales team to industries like gaming, home entertainment, and consumer packaged goods, the company said.

Share
Published by
Geoff Weiss

Recent Posts

Have you heard? Saluting Patriotic Kenny, visiting 30 NBA arenas, and meeting a new shark

Each week, we handpick a selection of stories to give you a snapshot of trends,…

8 hours ago

YouTube is starting to test a “Top Fans” distribution option limited to the uppermost 1% of viewers

Platforms like Patreon and OnlyFans let creators distribute paywalled videos that can only be watched…

9 hours ago

MrBeast’s build kits are in the (Kids) Club at a Lowe’s location near you

There's a new creator-led line of monthly build kits arriving at a major home goods…

11 hours ago

After 10 years and 50 million subscribers, now’s the time for Genevieve’s Playhouse to hit the toy aisle

Growing a YouTube channel to 50 million subscribers is no small feat, but Genevieve's Playhouse…

1 day ago

Spotify is doing creator memberships, and also AI-generated podcasts

The global podcast industry raked in $9.2 billion last year, surging 27% from 2024. That's…

1 day ago

Are male and female social media accounts floating in gendered political bubbles?

On the heels of a study that examined political polarization on social media feeds, a…

1 day ago