Snapchat has undone
its controversial redesign’s most significant change in an update to some users
today. A tab that shows Stories in reverse chronological order, replacing the
redesign’s algorithmically sorted feed for many people.
We’ve reached out to Snap Inc and haven’t
heard back.
Showing the most
recent Stories first makes them predictable and coherent to browse. It helps
you see what’s going on with friends right now. That could be helpful if you
wanted to find out which friends were free to hang out or if there’s a party
you could join.
Users are seeing the
reverse chronological Stories feed in both the design where there’s just
Stories and All tabs, as well as the design where there’s separate Stories and
Chat tabs.
But reverse chronological
order heavily prioritizes people who post frequently, which can bury your best
friends. Snapchat’s move towards algorithmic ranking in its big redesignensured that people you watched Stories from or chatted with most showed up at
the top so you’d be less likely to miss their content. That’s similar to how
Facebook’s feed worked for a long time, and how Instagram started ranking its
feed two years ago. By moving social media stars and brands that don’t follow
you back over to the Discover section as part of the redesign, there’s less
noise in the chronological Stories list, so it works better than it did a year
ago.
Switching to
algorithmic sorting has helped Instagram and Twitter boost growth, which is
likely why Snapchat made it part of the redesign. The company had seen daily
active user growth sag from 17 percent to under 3 per quarter after the launch
of Facebook’s Snapchat clone Instagram Stories. Snapchat saw growth improve
after starting to roll out the algorithm-powered redesign in Q4 2017.
For the most hardcore
Snapchat users who check it constantly, today’s update has been met with joy
and gratitude. They were likely to see their closest friends’ posts no matter
when or how infrequently they posted
But ditching the
algorithm could make it tougher for newer and less consistent Snapchat users
who want to pop in and see the most relevant content instead of having to sort
through distant acquaintances. That could inhibit growth. Essentially, Snapchat
might have to decide between preferencing it’s most engaged and loyal users, or
aiming to add more casual users.
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