TikTok is eating Netflix’s lunch — and that’s great for startups

An argument for approaching TikTok as streaming, not social

Correlation is not causation

Have you heard the one about how, when the iPhone was invented, chewing gum sales plummeted, and haven’t since recovered since?

Allegedly, this is because people started looking at their phones while waiting in line at the cashier, instead of taking inat all the delicious chewing gum on offer.

Of course, this could well be a correlation, rather than causation (I did learnthis ‘fact’on TikTok after all), but it does raise an interesting point.

As Scott puts it: “The company that’s feeding off Netflix’s carcass now commands more attention than Facebook and Instagram combined — but has a content budget of $0, versus $17 billion at Netflix — and it’s TikTok.”

(I wonder if Reed Hastingsstill thinksNetflix’s biggest competitor is sleep?)

What the numbers say about TikTok’s growth

“The company that’s increased more in value than any [other] in the world over the last 12 months?” Prof Galloway insists it’s TikTok.

But is he right?

While clocking only$4.6 billionannual revenue in 2021 compared to Meta’s$117.9 billion, TikTok has shown unprecedented growth since its launch in 2017.

TechCrunch reportedin January on TikTok’s explosive 325% growth in 2020, saying the monthly time spent per user also increased faster than any other app — notably, by 65% in the US alone, far outperformingFacebook.

TikTok was the world’smost downloaded appin both 2020 and 2021.

And if you think that’s because you keep deleting and reinstalling it, that’s not it: it reachedone billion users by the end of Q2 2021, setting a new growth record for non pre-installed apps; andis expected to reach 1.5 billionby the end of 2022.

Plus, the fact that their stock isn’t public has, thus far, sheltered it from the scrutiny faced by Meta and friends.

As Galloway observes: “It’s also managed to avoid some of the shitshow that is Facebook; and it does have – at least the perception of — increased moderation.”

Whatever your personal opinion on the platform, two things are demonstrably true: TikTok is winning the war for our attention, andNetflix needs to make some changes— but that doesn’t mean the two are connected.

TikTok as a streaming service — a helpful lens for startup marketing

The numbers don’t lie.

If you’ve found product market fit with a segment anywhere between the ages of 18 and 80, you — and whatever you’re selling — should be on TikTok.

SensorTower reportedthat TikTok users spent $2.3 billion dollars in the app in 2021, compared to $1.3 billion the year before.

And Scott’s right: many brands and influencers are approaching it more like a streaming service than a social media platform — particularlysince February, when TikTok increased its video time limit from three to 10 minutes.

Considerthis 4-minute-long TikTokfrom Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum.

It begins with the infamous clip of Kim Kardashian screaming at Kourtney, and transitions into a full-on art history lecture on the similarities and differences between reality television and the 16th- to 17th-century “Daily Life Paintings” of Steen and Vermeer — both of whom, of course, are viewable at the museum.

Startup founders and CEOs likeEvan Van AukenandTerrance McMahonhave leveraged the unparalleled power of TikTok’s infamous algorithm and are streaming their lessons in entrepreneurship and remote work for audiences numbering in the hundreds of thousands.

How to approach TikTok as a founder or entrepreneur

Auken and eight other “trailblazing TikTok entrepreneurs” shared their advice inthis great story by 99designs, and a lot of their tips for founders on TikTok echoes Scott’s view of the platform as a streaming platform, rather than social media.

According to thearticle, it’s crucial that you:

If you’re a founder debating whether or not to make your TikTok debut, maybe it’s helpful to do what Uncle Scott says.

Start thinking about TikTok not as social media, but rather, as your personal or startup brand’s free streaming service.

In many ways, this is merely an extension of what we’ve known for years: no two social media platforms are the same — and treating them as such is a recipe for disaster.

The only difference here is that TikTok has taken this trend even further. And the first step in mastering the platform? Well, it’s understanding it.

Story byNatasha Nel

Natasha Nel is a journalist at the The Next Web, based in Amsterdam, covering technology, startups, growth, strategy, and careers.Natasha Nel is a journalist at the The Next Web, based in Amsterdam, covering technology, startups, growth, strategy, and careers.

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