BlackBerry’s big surprise: BBM beats major messaging rivals in engagement

BBM is holding on strong despite Line’s furious user growth

BlackBerry shocked the messaging app industry by hitting 20 million combined iPhone and Android downloads in just a week after BBM went cross-platform. Now, new Android data from Mobidia provided exclusively to BGR shows that right after its launch, BBM pulled ahead of or matched major rivals in the key metric of weekly engagement. This is particularly impressive considering that consumers who have downloaded BBM have not had much time to build up dense network of contacts that would drive extensive engagement, nor does BBM offer the kind of range of games, stickers or other diversions that LINE and Kik feature.

In the week of October 20th, BBM’s engagement was 40 minutes in the United States, moving well ahead of Tango’s 24-minute engagement level. It’s worth noting that Tango reached 130 million users last spring and it added gaming to its messaging platform already in 2012.

BBM also nearly matched the 44-minute engagement level of Viber. This is a solid performance considering how BBM has yet to roll out a coherent content strategy. The hot teen favorite Kik remains far above the field with 106 minutes of engagement, so BBM still has a way to go to catch up with the biggest messaging apps.

Even more impressively, BBM soared ahead of LINE in major European markets and soundly beat its Asian rival by posting European engagement of 59 minutes versus LINE’s engagement of 38 minutes. LINE has been aggressively courting European consumers for more than a year and is now prepping a Tokyo IPO that is expected to become one of the blockbuster listings of the year in Asia. In Europe, WhatsApp remains the engagement titan, reaching weekly level of 160 minutes.

BlackBerry’s messaging app has a long way to go before it can dream of challenging Kik or WhatsApp in their core markets. But the early engagement numbers of BBM do not seem to reflect the morbid curiosity of consumers who downloaded it to play around it for a few minutes —they look like a sign of real consumer interest in the service.

More from BGR: iPad Air explodes, erupting with smoke and flames in retail shop

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Related stories

How BlackBerry's recent failures could help save the company

Former Apple CEO John Sculley nearly bid on BlackBerry

What BlackBerry may have up its sleeve for 'Plan C'