The US is one country where the pandemic has had little impact on our forecast, however. This year, there will be 146.3 million monthly messaging app users in the US, up 3.6% from 2019. That growth rate is only a few tenths of a point higher than our previous estimate of 3.1%.
The limited new uptake in mobile messaging has to do with the fact that people in the US already have well-established ways of communicating via mobile, such as traditional SMS and phone calls, that have persisted throughout the pandemic.
A CivicScience survey conducted in March 2020, for example, showed that 50% of US adults stayed connected during the pandemic primarily via phone calls.
Voice and video calling have also been major drivers of OTT messaging app adoption in other countries during the pandemic. In the absence of in-person interactions, mobile messaging services quickly became an alternative way to communicate “face-to-face” and in larger groups.
But the US is an iPhone-heavy country; 45.6% of US smartphone users will be iOS users this year. iPhones already have a built-in video calling feature, FaceTime, reducing their users’ need for a standalone app to video chat during the pandemic.
And then there is Zoom, a primarily enterprise-facing videoconferencing app that was quickly adopted by consumers for after-work happy hours, family get-togethers, and even church services. According to an April 2020 poll conducted by Ipsos for Mozilla, 66% of US video chat users used Zoom, making it the most popular platform, followed by FaceTime (48%).