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Abstract:Advertisers spend with Facebook because it works, thanks to its scale and targeting heft, and advertisers are slow and conservative, experts said.
Facebook cofounder Chris Hughes called for Facebook to be broken up in a New York Times op-ed.Facebook's domination has been enabled by advertising, which has continued unabated despite years of scandals.That's because Facebook works for them, thanks to its scale and ability to target, and advertisers are slow and conservative, experts told Business Insider.That could change if Facebook's targeting continues to be curtailed and advertisers migrate to other platforms, such as Amazon and Google.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.Facebook cofounder Chris Hughes called for the breakup of Facebook in a New York Times op-ed. Hughes wrote that there's been no accountability at Facebook because it dominates social networking. That domination is enabled by advertisers, from whom Facebook makes its money.Facebook's advertising, as well as its user and stock-price growth, has continued unabated despite years of scandal and problems specific to advertisers (measurement snafus and a walled-garden approach to data). Facebook beat Wall Street's revenue expectations for the first quarter and shrugged off news it was expecting to settle an unprecedented $3 billion to $5 billion Federal Trade Commission fine over privacy issues.With advertising continuing to enable Facebook's growth, is there anything that would cause advertisers to tap the brakes?Right now, Facebook is a superior ad vehicle because it has mountains of data advertisers can use for targeting. But it's been curtailing targeting abilities after scandals and has promised a tool that will let people clear their history. At the same time, advertisers can target on Amazon, Google, and eventually through addressable TV. If Facebook's targeting edge erodes significantly, it could become less attractive as an ad vehicle, Debra Aho Williamson, a principal analyst at eMarketer, said.“Amazon has its own form of targeting,” she said. “Google has access to lot of location data. Advertisers are looking at addressable TV that has new ways of targeting. You have to wonder if at some point it all comes together.”But until then, there are powerful forces keeping advertisers on Facebook. Here's a breakdown:1. Facebook worksAdvertisers still perform better on Facebook than on alternatives, experts said.“We continue to hear from performance marketers that news feed is still killing it and the relative simplicity/efficiency of Facebook's delivery across three massive scale platforms — news feed, Instagram, Messenger — is unmatched and continues to get better,” Mark Zgutowicz, the managing director at Rosenblatt Securities, said. “Until that changes, spend will stay.”2. Facebook has the scaleFacebook's reach outstrips other digital platforms', with 2.3 billion users worldwide on the Facebook app alone. Facebook-owned apps comprised three of the top four networking platforms, with Google's YouTube at No. 2 with 1.9 billion users. Snapchat, which advertisers have pinned hopes on to rival Facebook, trails with less than 300 million. The scale in turn fuels Facebook's data.“If eyeballs stay on Facebook, advertisers will remain,” Darren Herman, an operating partner at Bain Capital, said. “It's hard to move off the Facebook platform because of the eyeballs (thus leading to data platform) they have.”3. There's safety in FacebookFor as much as advertisers say they want to be nimble and adapt to consumers, they're slow to pivot when it comes to their advertising, Williamson said. Take traditional TV, for which revenue hasn't dropped with ratings.Their agencies are invested in Facebook, too, having built systems to plug into these platforms.“Advertisers get a lot of benefit from Facebook,” she said. “They have their Advertising Council that major brands are part of. And they see the advertising is performing well.”4. That performance fuels a conservative mindset“This is an industry that is pathologically obsessed with reach, which means no advertisers will ever get fired for buying on Facebook,” said an agency exec, speaking anonymously. “Between the big boys and the long tail, no marketer is going to abandon Facebook until another scale alternative presents itself.”Don't advertisers care about their social influence, what with all their talk about being purpose-driven?Advertisers are reluctant to mix business decisions with social media's social consequences, Rob Norman, the retired global digital chief of GroupM, said. That's because their imperative is the performance of their own businesses, and they are reluctant to take positions from which it may be hard to retreat and that might open their own businesses to criticism of their roles in problems such as pollution, obesity, unfair pricing, and discrimination.5. Facebook has kept users despite scandalsAdvertisers also haven't been publicly tarnished by their ads showing up next to objectionable content on Facebook in the same way they are on YouTube, experts said.Facebook may have content that's just as damaging to society, if not more, as YouTube's beheading videos, but it doesn't offend users the way it does on YouTube, Brian Wieser, the global president of business intelligence at GroupM, said. The Cambridge Analytica scandal in which Facebook allowed user data to be misused didn't cause a provable decline in people using Facebook, he said.“It's still an abstract thing; it doesn't stick the same way,” he said.6. Facebook has the long tailEven if big brands take a stand, most of Facebook's revenue comes from small- to medium-size advertisers that need Facebook's neighborhood-based targeting, said Terry Kawaja, the founder and CEO of Luma Partners, an advisory firm focused on digital media and marketing.
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By Elizabeth Culliford and Sheila Dang (Reuters) -Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc
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