As Facebook grows up, it courts Madison Avenue

Published on Mon, Feb 06, 2012 at 08:26 |  Source : Reuters

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3
0
0
Share on Tumblr

By Peter Lauria

(Reuters) - About a year ago, when it became clear that taking Facebook Inc public was a matter of when not if, Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg went out and poached Caroline Everson, then global advertising head at Microsoft Corp .

Landing an executive with Everson's pedigree was a coup - prior to Microsoft, she was a top advertising executive at Viacom Inc's MTV Networks and at Walt Disney Co . The hire also sent a clear message to Madison Avenue from the world's largest online social network: We want to work with you.

Until Everson's arrival as vice president of global marketing, Facebook's relationship with the advertising community was at best politely dismissive, at worst outright antagonistic.

Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg has said he views Facebook more as a way to connect people than a business, and he has been adamant about limiting the impact of ads on user experiences. Indeed, his reluctance to flood the social network with ads is widely viewed as one reason why Facebook endured while an earlier rival, MySpace, expired.

"Mark has an evangelical approach to advertising," said Martin Sorrell, chief executive of WPP Plc , the world's largest advertising agency. "He sees Facebook as a vehicle to open up communication, not to monetize."

But with 85 percent of its revenue derived from advertising last year -- when revenue was $3.71 billion, Facebook realized it needed to strike a more cooperative tone with Madison Avenue ahead of its initial public offering and the accompanying intense scrutiny on profit growth.

Advertising sources identified Everson, along with David Fischer, vice president of business and marketing partnerships, and Blake Chandlee, vice president of global agency relations, as the triumvirate leading Facebook's charm offensive.

"It's been remarkably different over the last 12 months," Michael Hayes, president of digital at advertising firm Initiative, said of Facebook's attitude toward the advertising community.

"They didn't really have a relationship with us before, but now they are trying to establish a relationship. I've definitely seen an uptick in their interest in working with us," he said.

Last September, Facebook set up a committee consisting of executives from brands that advertise on the site, as well as representatives from many top ad agencies, to regularly provide feedback on its advertising products and services.

The company also commissioned Hayes' firm, Initiative, to compare the success of Facebook ads against other media, such as television, the first time it asked for such a study.

Sorrell said Facebook plans to introduce new advertising products by the end of February. A source familiar with the announcement said it would center on new products around mobile advertising, but did not provide further details.

A Facebook representative declined to comment on any new product announcements or to make Everson available for an interview, citing the quiet period ahead of the IPO.

ADVERTISING, FRIEND OR ENEMY?

Facebook, which boasts 845 million users worldwide, is more dependent on ad sales than CBS Corp , the most ad-dependent traditional media company, which derives two-thirds of its revenue from advertising.

Facebook ranks as the top provider of graphical online display ads in the United States, accounting for roughly 28 percent of the total "impressions" of such ads last year, according to industry research firm comScore.

But analysts say the price that Facebook charges for the bulk of its ads is lower than those of other forms of online ads, such as the branding campaigns popular on sites such as Yahoo or the search ads offered by Google .

Facebook is taking steps to make its ads more valuable to marketers by integrating social networking features with "sponsored stories" or ads that highlight a user's friends who have "liked" a certain product.

The big question is whether Facebook can further evolve its advertising offerings, which are tempered by privacy laws and the changing parameters around how social networks can mine user data for targeted marketing.

"Their ad product opportunities aren't too robust right now, and the effectiveness is spotty at best," Hayes said.

Facebook has come under criticism for the way it has used member data in the past, including in 2008 when its Beacon advertising product was assailed for disclosing such things as what purchases people were making on Amazon.com

  

Trending News

Business News

Windows 8 early adoption update to cost Rs. 800
Morgan Stanley bomb: Predicts India's 2012 GDP at 5.7% "Morgan Stanley bomb: Predicts India's 2012 GDP at 5.7%"

Truce in BJP? Modi meets Advani, Vajpayee

Re-listing Guidelines Lock-in On Promoter Grp Hold For 1 Yr Fm Date Of Re-listing

The latest earning numbers FIRST on CNBC-TV18
Videos

Jun 1 2012, 19:15

Market may dip 10-15% this month: Jeff Chowdhry

- in FII View

Jun 1 2012, 11:57

Raamdeo Agrawal lauds Q4 nos, sees drastic rate cuts ahead

- in MARKET OUTLOOK

Interviews

Jun 1 2012, 15:36 | Source: CNBC-TV18

M&M performed well on strategy, not fuel prices: Nayer  

Jun 1 2012, 11:29 | Source: CNBC-TV18

HDIL eyes revenues of Rs 2500 cr in FY13  

Subscribe to

Moneycontrol Newsletters

Moneycontrol.com offers you a choice of various sectoral and other newsletters for FREE!