Instagram has updated its app to include a new feature dubbed Instagram Direct. The new feature allows users to better share photos and video with a single user, or a group of up to 15 people.
The updated app, version 5.0, is now in the Apple App Store and Google Play. A version for Windows Phone is in beta, coming soon.
Using Direct is as simple as downloading the new app (or updating the old one) and tapping the inbox icon now located on the top right. From there, a Direct message can be sent, and sent ones can be viewed.
The friends you share with can like and comment on your photo or video; and if they don’t, you can still see if they’ve viewed it. You can also use Direct to send content to people who don’t follow you, though your post will go into their requests queue.
Additionally, posts sent with Instagram Direct won’t (and can’t) be shared to sites such as Facebook and Twitter. Users also can’t tag people or user hashtags in Instagram Direct. It is, simply, about private-ish interactions, or sharing small – a societal concept with which Instagram has helped to do away.
The app currently has 150 million active monthly users, shares 55 million phones on an average day and supports 1.2 billion Likes.
Five months ago – two and a half years after its launch – Instagram added the ability to record and share video, up to 15 seconds in length, within the app.
And two months ago – a year and a half after being purchased by Facebook for $1 billion (£612m) – it added ads.
Sponsored Instagram posts have a starburst icon with an arrow and the word “Sponsored” in the top-right corner, and each is vetted by Instagram for content and design quality.
While Facebook’s purchase of Instagram caused some users to forecast its demise – or at least the departure of its cool cache – it continues to have millions of young users, who are tantalizing to businesses. According to Pew Research (as Time has pointed out), 43 percent of cell phone owners between the ages of 18 and 29 use Instagram, while 18 percent of the 30- to 49-year-old crowd do.
“Targeting millennials? Instagram away,” said the Time report.
Instagram faces a growing cadre of rivals, however, all of which are working out how to monetise.
“Instagram is being threatened by more direct rivals such as Vine and Snapchat, but is also seeing indirect competition from popular messaging services like WhatsApp, where users are spending more time at the expense of Instagram and also Facebook itself,” Ovum Principal Analyst Eden Zoller said in a 12 December statement.
“This is the last thing that Facebook wants as it’s working hard to drive advertising on Instagram in a bid to monetise the service. ”
At a press event in New York 12 December, to introduce Instagram Direct, co-founder Kevin Systrom said an ad-related announcement is coming soon, though it’s too early just yet to talk about ads in Instagram Direct.
“[Systrom] didn’t rule out doing something in the future, but he said Instagram is currently focusing its ad efforts on the broader campaigns,” TechCrunch reported 12 December. “A more interesting use case, he suggested, is for brand contests within user-submitted photos, with Instagram Direct as the photo collection mechanism.”
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Originally published on eWeek.
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