Facebook's Plan B: New ads in News Feed
The
social network, currently under pressure to grow revenue, is now
letting advertisers run a more familiar, albeit less holistic, ad type
in the News Feed.
Move over, Sponsored Stories, you've got company. Facebook today
announced that advertisers would be able to pitch members directly from
the News Feed with less holistic messages that direct people outside of
the social network's walled garden. The
launch,
which Facebook is calling a "small alpha test," brings Facebook
Exchange-targeted (FBX) ads, which are special ad units served to
members based on their online browsing behavior, to the desktop version
of News Feed for the first time.
"We wanted to give advertisers
and agencies the opportunity to deliver highly relevant ads in News
Feed, the most engaging place on the Web," the company wrote in a blog
post. "We also believe that ads delivered through FBX will create more
relevant ads for people."
The addition of the ad unit will not change the total number of ads people see in their News Feeds, the company said.
Previously, Facebook allowed advertisers to run FBX-delivered ads
on the right-hand side on the desktop. This unit's format, called "Page
post link ads" in Facebook speak, is more familiar to traditional
display ad buyers than Facebook's own native ad unit, the Sponsored
Story, because advertisers can tap their own user intent data for
targeting purposes and direct people to outside landing pages, instead
of Facebook Pages, for conversion-tracking.
The introduction of FBX-delivered ads to News Feed, albeit small
to start, feels like Facebook's Plan B revenue-growth strategy.
Sponsored Stories in News Feed, on both Web and mobile, sure sounded
like the company's Plan A, especially the way Chief Executive Mark
Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg talked about the units, which offer
Facebook Page owners increased exposure for their content, in
post-earnings calls with investors and analysts. In October, the company exclaimed that it was making
$4 million a day from the in-stream, Sponsored Story placements by the end of the third quarter 2012.
But since the social network reported
fourth-quarter earnings in late January, and
stayed mum on revenue from News Feed ads,
investors have been increasingly skeptical of the company's ability to
grow revenue as it spends more. The stock has slid backward, down about
$6 per share, or 20 percent, since it closed at $31.24 on Wednesday,
January 30.
Investors haven't exactly rallied around today's
reveal, but Facebook's shares are trading up by a few cents Tuesday.
Perhaps there's something to this Plan B.
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