Bloated Facebook Messenger promises to simplify in 2018

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“The app became too cluttered,” Facebook’s head of Messenger David Marcus announced today in a post of plans for 2018 including “massively simplifying and streamlining Messenger this year.” Between Messenger Day/Stories, its Snapchatty augmented reality camera, a bot Discover section, games, and more, Facebook had to build artificial intelligence “M Suggestions” just to remind people of all the features it has crammed in the app.

Marcus (pictured, right) is right — Messenger has strayed from its value of being an easy way to chat with people across devices without their phone numbers.

So in a wise move similar to Facebook’s recent retreat from news and public content with its big algorithm overhaul, Messenger plans to consolidate around its core.

“Over the last two years, we built a lot of capabilities to find the features that continue to set us apart. A lot of them have found their product market fit; some haven’t,” Marcus admits.

Here’s just some of the feature creep that’s invaded Messenger since 2016 without making the experience better day-to-day for its 1.3 billion users:

The streamlining is smart, given that Messenger has become the center of many people’s Facebook experience as sharing and browsing increasingly shifts to Instagram, Snapchat, Twitter, and other apps.

Messenger should concentrate on communication. It doesn’t have to abandon everything else, but content broadcasting like Stories shouldn’t literally be highlighted above our message threads.

And areas like games and bots don’t necessarily need whole tabs that could be used for more ways to actually get together offline or hang out online with your friends.

From the rest of Marcus’ announcement, though, it seems like some of the least liked features won’t be disappearing. Here’s the rest of his “trends” for Messenger in 2018, which are vague, so I’ve added some hunches about how they’ll turn emerge in the product:

From that it sounds like Messenger might become part of Facebook’s Safety Check in a more private and personal way. That could hopefully improve on the current system of prompting users to broadcast on Facebook that they’re okay, which can make friends worry that anyone who hasn’t posted might not be.

I suspect that Facebook’s instant split-screen group video chat Bonfire, which mimics teen app Houseparty, could go from a standalone app testing in a few countries to being baked more directly into Messenger in some form. Perhaps an even bigger opportunity would be a Down To Lunch-style product for helping find out which of your friends are available to hang out offline, not just chat.

“Visual messaging . . . is where the industry is heading, and we won’t be looking back,” Marcus writes. But perhaps Messenger could focus more on back-and-forth visual messaging over broadcast, and make Stories more a piece of your message threads rather than bolted to the top of the app.

Perhaps Messenger could let you call or text for customer service, for when talking is actually easier than typing. Beyond that, better messaging tools could lead to wider adoption for businesses.

This sounds like an expansion of Messenger ads to a more self-serve format like the Messenger Broadcast tool we reported it’s prototyped.

How Facebook will actually balance a simplification of its app with all these new things it wants to add will be quite a tightrope to walk.

If it annoys users too much, and even a few of their friends stray from the app and stop responding on Messenger, it could create a downward spiral. But with iMessage also becoming bloated, Snapchat’s growth slowing down, and Google’s messaging apps a mess, Facebook is still best-poised to rule chat.

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