7B visits in a single month, a growth line that echoes the primordial years of Facebook, and a demographic curve that bends upward as the 45+ crowd becomes nearly 1/3 of the entire ecosystem. ChatGPT alone moves close to 6B monthly visits and now stands shoulder to shoulder with Instagram in the planetary rankings, as if conversation itself had quietly reclaimed the centre of the digital stage.

People are not walking away from social networks, at least not yet, but they are moving the part of their digital life that matters into a more intimate chamber.

The displacement has already happened, almost unnoticed, and this raises an uncomfortable question for the industry: if the social layer drifts away from the public feed and settles inside the intimacy of 1-to-1 dialogue, what remains of influence marketing when influence stops circulating through staged spectacle and begins to germinate in the solitude of private conversation?

Simone Puorto
Simone Puorto
Head of Emerging Trends and Strategic Innovation, Hospitality Net

My take is that users are not abandoning social networks in a black-or-white sense. What they are abandoning within social media is the part of digital life that involves asking, reflecting, learning, and (more interestingly for our industry), deciding, comparing, and buying.

The data support this shift: engagement on Facebook and X has fallen to around 0.15%, and Instagram engagement is down roughly 24% YoY. Feeds, moreover, are saturated and increasingly optimized for reaction rather than intention or action, in other words, CTA.

Influence marketing is feeling the same strain, with multiple industry surveys showing that a majority of users now perceive influencer posts as barely distinguishable from standard advertising.

My take is that conversation-based platforms succeed precisely where feed-based systems have failed: by removing performative pressure, reducing social friction, and creating a space where users can be uncertain, shy, incomplete, or openly wrong (and, therefore, more willing to be suggested hotel X, Y, Z).

So the question is no longer whether chatbots are the new social media, but whether marketing is ready to operate in a world where influence happens quietly, conversationally, and in ways that are far harder to track, attribute, or even deliberately shape.

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