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Why Facebook and MySpace Stink for Ads

By Jake Swearingen | Apr 16, 2008

facebookscrabble.jpgI wrote yesterday about the always-declining print ad pages and urged ad firms and clients to investigate online alternatives, but not every Internet outlet is optimal. Today there was a very smart article by Michael Estrin over at at iMedia, “Are advertisers killing Facebook?”, which turned a skeptical eye towards social networks as good online advertising platforms:

Long the darlings of Silicon Valley, sites like MySpace and Facebook have presented the world with nothing short of a phenomenon — and advertisers with the promise of a massive audience with members who are both highly engaged and quick to reveal personal details about themselves… Last month, The Economist ran a story on how social networks, which had received high praise from advertisers throughout 2007, still suffer from an inability to find a monetization model commensurate to their total number of page views. Google, too, has grumbled about social networks, and speculation has run rampant that the search giant is looking for a way out of its deal to sell inventory for MySpace.

Estrid talks to Greg Smith, a senior partner and COO at Neo@Ogilvy:

At their core, social networks are closer to a telephone conversation or a meeting in a coffee house than reading a newspaper or watching TV. For Smith, that means sites like MySpace and Facebook are probably good places to deliver marketing messages, but not specific ads. Precisely what that means isn’t certain, but according to Smith, social networks are in danger of being destroyed by salvos from Madison Ave.

Judging from my own experience on social networks, this means that advertisers do better with trying to become part of the social network than simply buying a banner targeted at a certain vertical. My eyes skim over an ad for It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia or SubPop while I’m looking at friend’s photos or playing my next move in Scrabble. But give me even a small reason and I’ll easily become friends with SubPop on MySpace or join a It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia fan group on Facebook, turning my own profile into a small advertisement in and of itself.

Jake Swearingen has written for Wired and Business 2.0, covering everything from locative technology to high-definition online video.

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  •  
    1

    fraxsafety

    04/18/08 | Report as spam

    Social Network Ads

    Although these platform provide an expansive audience, in keeping with comments about it being akin to a phone conversation, ads on these networks (unless very unobtrusive) tend to annoy.

    Advertisers and web developers tend to forget that with all the fancy flash animations and injections of ads, they are battling the consumers desire for faster experiences and privacy on the web.

    As a social network user, targeted ads on my web experience just generally tick me off.Couple that with the lack of a monetization model, and you're just going to annoy the target audience you're trying to attract. Ads on networking sites just aren't worth it in the end.

  •  
    2

    Innovation Speaker

    04/22/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Why Facebook and MySpace Stink for Ads

    Display ads suck in general because people are busy doing something (or at least trying to do something).



    If Facebook and MySpace really want to be successful in advertising, they have to build their platform such that advertisements come before or after the user completes a task.



    Either that or they must convince advertisers that their ads build awareness even if they don't drive clicks in the same way as search advertising.



    The way they are going they have the opportunity to clutch failure from the jaws of victory.



    Braden Kelley


    BloggingInnovation.com

  •  
    3

    valenna

    04/23/08 | Reported as spam

    Message has been deleted.

  •  
    4

    rajanand12

    11/09/09 | Report as spam

    Advertising

    I agree nothing can beat an opportunity to interact directly with advertisers. Although I think several advertisers are almost in a habbit of splashing money on traditional ad platforms. Changing their mindset would be difficult (although it seems to be happening).
    I personally feel that sometimes targetted advertising could be benefitial on Myspace and Facebook. I found Myspace advertising fantastic for creative type people, just wrote a blog here.

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