- Display Advertising "Facebook is making gains in so-called display ads--the banners, videos and other graphical promotions that appear on websites, reports Brian Womack at Bloomberg. "It may grab about 9.4 percent of that market in the U.S. this year, up from 6.6 percent in 2009."
- It Has the Data, writes Willis Wee at Penn Olson:
It isn’t just about being cool, fun and having a large user base. The key thing in advertising is data. Facebook has all the needed data for advertisers to target based on our profiles. In a few clicks, advertisers are able to create ads for a specific group of consumers. To advertisers, Facebook is the perfect platform to make sure money is spent on the right target group.
- Games Are Important Too, writes Jolie O'Dell of Mashable: "The blockbuster success of casual games from studios such as Zynga add up to more coin in Facebook's coffers when users pay with Facebook Credits; for every dollar the user spends on Facebook Credits, the social network gets 30 cents."
- Did Facebook Purposefully Lower Expectations? "The social network may be employing a tactic more common among publicly held companies: Set lower expectations of revenues or earnings so that you can beat them and then impress investors," writes Jackie Cohen at All Facebook. "This might make more sense given how hot the company’s shares are on SecondMarket."
- This Is Just the Beginning "Once Facebook has a true web-wide
view (i.e., is connected with nearly all 1.1 billion people on the web),
their scale becomes completely un-ignorable by all major advertisers,"
writes David Pakman
at Ad Age. "They are already at this point today in many markets, but
this will become true next year in essentially all online geographic
markets." Pakman argues that with a payments system and a social ad
network, Facebook will eventually reach $20 billion in revenue. Even
more optimistic than Pakman is Wedbush analyst Lou Kerner who thinks
Facebook could be woth $200 billion by 2015. He explains himself on
Bloomberg TV:
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John Hudson



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