Facebook's 3-step plan to take over the rest of the world
mark zuckerberg
mark zuckerberg

(Justin Sullivan/Getty)
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

Facebook has its eyes set on global domination, and it's quickly executing on its plan to get there.

Earlier this week, the company rolled out a new kind of ad format meant to bring a video experience to low-bandwidth emerging markets.

Throughout the launch event, the main refrain was how Facebook plans to "connect the next billion."

Right now, the main Facebook app has nearly 1.5 billion monthly active users. Instagram, its photo-sharing app, has 300 million, while Messenger and WhatsApp, its chat apps, have 700 million and 900 million, respectively.

That's a huge swath of the word's population, but Facebook says that it's just the beginning.

Right now, about 3 billion people have access to the internet, but 3 billion more are set to come online in the next five years, primarily from emerging markets like India and Africa.

Facebook wants to rope them all into its apps and keep its $3.8 billion in quarterly ad revenue climbing.

Here's its three-pronged approach to taking over the world:

1. Make FB work everywhere

Although most people in the US can fire up the Facebook app on their phone and scroll through their News Feed without noticeable lag time, that's not the case in most of the world, where people have slow connections. For example, one-third of the next billion people that come online will do so from India, where the majority of mobile connections are only 2G.

Facebook created this graphic to illustrate the network break-down:

Connectivity
Connectivity

(Facebook)

In order to convince people in emerging markets that its app is still valuable for them, Facebook needs to make sure that it works on any kind of phone with any kind of connection, as well as possible.

The team has sicced its engineering and product teams on solving that problem. The company highlighted its successes earlier this month, like how it has created an open-sourced Network Connection Class system that lets the app figure out a user's connection speed on the fly. With that info, it can adjust what kind of News Feed stories it shows them and how to load them.

For example, with a slow connection, the app will prioritize fully displaying stories that the user is looking at, versus partially loading a dozen pieces of content at once, as well as only initially loading low-res versions of photos. To make sure that people never simply see a loading symbol or gray boxes, it will also show stories loaded on previous connections when a user taps open the app, even when there isn't any connection at all.

To make sure employees understand the challenge, Facebook recently launched a new initiative called 2G Tuesdays that prompts all of its employees to opt into one hour of a simulated slow connection once a week, to help them identify ways it could make the experience even better.