How does Facebook make money?
On Friday Facebook went public, with a value of £66billion.
Since then shares have crashed and investigations and law suits launched as
people try and work out what it’s really worth – so the question is: If the
networking site is free to join and use, how exactly does it make money?
By Emma Lunn
Hoe does Facebook
make money if it's free to use? (Image: PA)
Facebook’s figures
are quite astonishing. The site’s initial
public offering (IPO) was priced at $38 a share, giving the site a
$104billion (£66billion) valuation and making it the third-largest offering in
US history.
That rated Facebook
as bigger than Amazon
(£62billion), Cisco
(£57billion) but behind Google
(£129billion) and Apple
(£315billion).
Not bad for a site
that’s only eight years old and was set up by students in a Harvard dorm. It
now has 900 million active users and if Facebook were a country, it would be
the third largest in the world (after China and India).
Facebook claims it
had an average of 526 million daily active users in March 2012, an increase of
41% from a year ago. It had registered 125 billion "friend
connections" as of 31 March and 3.2 billion "likes" and
comments.
Independent figures
show people looked at more pages and spent more time on Facebook last month
than on any other site in the world (including Google).
Show
me the money
That’s all well and
good, but how does Facebook make money and why are investors piling their cash
into the site so sure it will continue to
rake it in?
In short,
advertising. The site made $3.7billion (£2.4billion) of revenue last year, up
88% on 2010, with $3.1billion (£2billion) coming from advertising. The rest
comes from payments and other fees which have been making up a large percentage
of Facebook’s revenue over
the past two years.
Advertisers are
attracted by two key things on Facebook; firstly, its massive reach with around
500 million daily active users, and secondly the ability to target ads with
“relevance” based on the information individuals share with
the website.
It’s
all about you
If your interests
and status updates talk about tennis expect to see lots of tennis-related ads
popping up on your profile page. And if a woman changes her relationship status
to “engaged”, she’ll suddenly see a lot of adverts for wedding dress shops in her
area popping up.
Basically, the
wealth of information Facebook stored on each of its users makes it
an
advertiser’s dream.
Another thing
Facebook ad can do is highlight users’ friends’ connections with a business or
brand. So if your friends are in the habit of “checking in” at certain stores
or places, you’ll know about it and perhaps be influenced to shop there too.
Phone
lines down
One area where
Facebook hasn’t exploited money-making opportunities yet is advertising on
mobile apps. More than half the site’s 845 million monthly active users
access the site via mobile phone yet neither Facebook apps or the Facebook’s
mobile website have adverts.
Zuckerberg is aware
this needs to be addressed. In a document companies are required to submit
prior to floatation which lists the major weakness of their business, Facebook
acknowledged that future growth could be harmed if the site is "unable to
successfully implement monetization strategies for our mobile users".
However, Facebook’s recent
purchase of photo-sharing app Instagram for $1billion (£636million)
could provide Facebook with a route into the mobile world as well as keeping
the app out of the hands of rivals such
as Twitter or Google.
Beyond
ads
Non-advertising
revenue on Facebook comes from payments for games on the site, mostly for games
made by Zynga.
The social network game development company is responsible for games such as
CityVille, FarmVille, Empires & Allies and ZyngaPoker.
One of the most
popular Facebook games FarmVille allows users to harvest a virtual farm by
planting and growing crops and trees, and buying livestock. Gamers are given
virtual coins to set up their farm and they earn more from matured crops. But
gamers who are eager to progress through the game can buy extra virtual coins
with real money.
Facebook takes a 30%
cut of Zynga's revenue, and a roughly similar cut from other companies. Virtual
goods accounted for 12% of Facebook's revenue for 2011, according to documents
filed by the company with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
With Facebook users
happy to spend $445million (£283million) on goods that only exist virtually,
it’s easy to see why investors ploughing money into Facebook this week might
expect it to be a one-way bet.
Facebook has already
said it “may seek to extend the use of payments to other types of apps in the
future” - but how well this will go down with Facebook users who are used to
the site being completely free is anyone’s guess.
Ads
undermined
The continuation of
impressive advertising revenue is in doubt too. General Motors has already
announced plans to pull its £10million advertising from Facebook as it
wasn’t converting enough sales.
According
to WordStream, a provider of search engine marketing software and services,
Google ads get 0.4% click-through rate, but Facebook gets just a poor 0.05%.
In other words,
Google's ads are almost 10 times more effective than Facebook's ads. And you
can see why; people use Google as a search engine while they log on to Facebook
to see what their friends are up to.
Finally, you only
have to look at the history of tech stocks, such as Friends Reunited and
MySpace, to see ventures with promising starts not reaching their apparent
potential.
So, after launching
on to the stock market with great fanfare, time will tell whether investors
will “like” Facebook.
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