A Forrester Research analyst recently penned an open letter to Mark Zuckerberg, in which he claimed that Facebook is failing marketers, citing reasons such as advertiser satisfaction surveys, low ad view percentages, and poor results. His point of view is shaped by feedback from over 350 senior marketing executives in the US, Canada, and the UK that Forrester surveyed.
They’re your fans, not your servants. One of the points made to show how Facebook is failing marketers is the percentage of fans of a page (defined as people who have “liked” the brand) that receive brand updates. These fans only receive branded updates 16% of the time “organically”, leaving Facebook marketers with having to pay to have their messages show up to more fans. Stop the presses. Marketers must spend money to get in front of their prospects and customers? So, while this may be a change to how Facebook worked in the past, the pay-to-play approach is Facebook’s business model and has been for some time. Facebook, in many respects, shares attributes with advertising options like television or other forms of paid media. People are there to consume content, be entertained, socialize, and the advertising gets consumed (or not) as part of those efforts. In TV, in print, radio, and all digital options, you must pay to get your ad seen. It has scale.
Like any interactive medium, on Facebook the consumer can tune you out at a click of the mouse or a touch of the screen. That phenomenon is not new to digital and certainly not new to social, where the “feed” reigns supreme, if not fleetingly, when it comes to consumer attention.
Others like Ford have found ways to use Facebook to drive better results than they get from their Super Bowl ads. If marketers aren’t having success on the Facebook platform, it’s probably not Facebook’s fault. It is also probably not the marketer’s fault. We lay the blame squarely at the feet of the agencies advising them. There are way too many great examples, incredible successes, and millions of dollars in sales out there that show that Facebook is not only an incredible opportunity, it is one that you as a marketer absolutely must figure out.