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Facebook is preparing an advertising model that would allow advertisers to target its users based on information that they reveal about themselves on the social networking website.
The group has soared in popularity to a record 30.6 million visitors last month, but is expected to make a profit of only $30 million (£15 million) this year on revenues of $150 million. Facebook’s new advertising system is central to the group’s efforts to “monetise” the social phenomenon that it has created, by which millions of people worldwide avidly log in to swap information about themselves.
The site is a potential goldmine to advertisers because it contains a host of data on its users, such as their birthdate, interests, events they plan to attend, holidays and musical tastes, as well as numerous photographs. The new model is at an early stage, but is to be piloted soon. It will enable advertisers to visit a dedicated website through which they could track down users more precisely than using traditional, blunter, targeting methods.
The advertisements are expected to appear differently from the banner ads and boxes that show up on the borders of Facebook pages at present. Instead, they would be mixed up with the “news feed”, which provides updates on the activities of each user’s friends.
Facebook’s attempt to boost advertising revenues by extending information about its members to advertisers echoes moves by Google to target ads based on the browsing activity of its users.
Roger Kay, the president of End-point Technologies, a US consultancy, said: “People get disconcerted about what appears to be the close monitoring of their behaviour. If you go to an XXX site and you get a condom ad popping up, it feels creepy.
“Google tried this kind of targeted approach and there were some complaints, and the group seems to have become more subtle about it. With Facebook, the new ad system may lead to some drop-off in users, but it’s a popular site so it shouldn’t hurt too much.”
Facebook does not have a wealthy parent company to prop it up, and so it is essential that the group record strong revenue growth, and an effective advertising system is by far the best way to do this, analysts say.
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I'll be deleting my Facebook profile now.
Roger Briskly, New York, NY,
There is far too much that is "illegal", far too much interference by governments in the voluntary interactions of individuals. If a person does not like this (or any particular) type of advertising, then s/he should not make use of those sites that employ it. This is a part of the economic side of social preferencing - voluntarily associating with and forming/maintaining relationships with others based entirely on the valuation by each of the other.
Kitty Antonik Wakfer, Casa Grande, AZ USA
Whatever happened to Data Protection?
Richard Hoblyn FSI, Limoges, FRANCE
To some extent this is a sensible way to market as it should reduce the amount of irrelevant junk mail that we receive on a daily basis.
All of these types of site are a method for farming information, so there should be no real surprise when Facebook or any other free social networking site takes all of your personal data and sells it to increase shareholder value
However, it does smack of an approach to peoples privacy that is completely devoid of feeling............
John, Madrid,
this sort of revenue-earner is an immoral action based on an illegal activity, forcing ads on users after scanning their activities is simply wrong, it should be illegal to do this
peter ashworth, LONDON,
Are they doing this to draw in the advertisers that left over the last few weeks?
Facebook seems to have found itself hit with various issues in the last few months and Adding this kind of advertising at this time should really be postponed or avoided. I like the the skin advertisements that google is developing for YouTube. Facebook should look at contacting companies who are trying to build up branding such as banks to skin their pages. People have no problems watching TV shows with advertisement that does not interrupt the show... so why not skin the webpage instead of giving out personal information about your subscribers.
Sofia Verlag, Munich, Germany