Facebook's new update will allow users to see most recent posts from friends
Starting
Thursday, the platform is splitting up its main "home"
section into two tabs. The move is part of a push by Facebook to show users
more entertaining, recommended content — to become what cofounder Mark
Zuckerberg has called a "discovery engine" — as it seeks to better
compete with rivals like TikTok for users' time and attention.
Now,
when users open Facebook,
they will see a home tab designed to help them discover new content based on
personalized, machine learning-powered recommendations. The home tab will also
feature Facebook Stories and Instagram Reels, which the company is
now encouraging users to post to both platforms.
Beside
the home tab will be a new "feeds" tab that won't contain any
suggested content, but rather will let users see the most recent posts from
friends, as well as groups and pages they follow. Within the feeds tab, users
can also create a "favorites" feed to filter the friends, pages and
groups they care most about.
Both
tabs will still include advertisements, according to the company. And the other
tabs users are used to, such as Facebook Watch and Groups, will remain the
same.
"We understand you may want more options when it comes
to sorting and seeing your content," the company said in a statement.
"There are times you might know just what you're looking for — say, the
latest posts from your groups — or you may want to encounter fresh,
entertaining content."
The new look for the platform comes on the heels of an announcement last week that Facebook will now allow users to have
up to five profiles under each account. Facebook said the option is intended to
make it easier for users to tailor their experience when engaging with certain
communities — say, friends versus coworkers — on the platform.
For years, Facebook and its sibling platform Instagram have
been accused of copying the popular new features of rival platforms instead of
innovating their own. Instagram Reels, which Meta is now attempting to more deeply
integrate into Facebook, are nearly identical to TikTok videos (in fact, when
the feature first launched, many users simply uploaded TikTok videos to
Instagram, complete with the rival logo). The platform updates also seem like
an attempt to mimic TikTok's success at keeping users hooked by showing them
recommended content, although Facebook appears to want to give users some
choice in engaging with the new direction or continuing to use the platform as
they always have.
Facebook
parent company Meta is
trying to stave off fierce competition from TikTok, which is contributing
to slowing profit growth at the company. In February, Meta
shocked investors by posting a rare stalling in quarterly user growth, a trend that reversed slightly in the first quarter of this year.
The company is set to report earnings next week for the three months ended in
June, for which it had projected total revenue of between $28 billion and $30
billion — an estimate that would be nearly in line with the prior
year's results.
Meta
is in the midst of transitioning to a company centered around a future,
augmented- and virtual-reality enabled "metaverse," rather than
social media. But it needs to keep raking in profits from its existing
platforms to fund investments into that vision.
The
new feeds tab will start appearing in Facebook's shortcuts bar for some users
on Thursday, and is expected to roll out globally over the next week.
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