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Facebook Deals, Groupon Rival, Open For Business In Select Cities (PICTURE)

First Posted: 04/26/11 09:45 AM ET Updated: 06/26/11 06:12 AM ET

Facebook Deals

(Ellen Gibson, AP/The Huffington Post) -- What happens when you cross the world's largest social network with one of the hottest business models in e-commerce? Facebook wants to find out.

Facebook is launching a deals program Tuesday in five U.S. cities, following on the popularity of Groupon and other services that offer deep discounts – for example: $50 worth of food at a local eatery for $25.

By allowing small businesses to leverage the Internet while helping consumers score great deals, these group-couponing services have become some of the fastest-growing businesses in the world.

Facebook now wants a part of that. It hopes to exploit its existing networks of friends and family when it begins testing offers in San Diego, San Francisco, Atlanta, Dallas and Austin, Texas.

Many deals sites have a social component. For instance, if you get three friends to buy a LivingSocial voucher, yours is free. Groupon's offers become valid only after a certain number of people purchase them.

But the deals are circulated to users through email, and the community aspect is secondary.

Facebook is hoping to change that.

"We're building a product that is social from the ground up," says Emily White, director of local for Facebook. "All of these deals are things you want to do with friends, so no teeth whitening, but yes to river rafting."

Starting Tuesday, when Facebook users in the five test markets log into the site, they will see a deals insignia at the bottom of the page.

Clicking on it brings up a list of currently available offers. A user can buy one, click the "like" button to recommend it to others or share the offer with friends through Facebook's private messaging system. When users purchase or "like" a deal, it shows up in their friends' news feed.

That means "the discovery of the product can happen in lots of different places," White says.

To get the program started, Facebook has enlisted 11 companies that already supply deals elsewhere. Restaurant reservation service OpenTable will broadcast offers for local eateries, while online ticket seller Viagogo will market events.

Not all offers involve discounts. Some are experiences people may not otherwise have access to, such as a backstage pass to Austin City Limits concerts, a tour of the Dallas Cowboys' new stadium, or a children's sleepover at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco with live-snake demos.

In some cases, you'll get a "friend bonus" – an additional discount – if at least one other person in your social network buys a deal.

Leveraging social tools and direct sharing among friends will be "a key to success for daily deal companies" going forward, says Lou Kerner, social media analyst at Wedbush.

This is not the first time a social network has made a foray into disseminating deals. Twitter launched its own daily deal program called Earlybird Offers last year but canceled it after just two months. Last November Facebook launched a product called Check-in Deals that allowed users to "check in" via their mobile phones when they visit certain businesses and in turn receive discounts and other special offers. Location-based social network Foursquare has a similar program.

Offers through Facebook can last anywhere from a day to a week. The social network won't disclose how much commission it takes. (With Groupon and others, the deal site typically takes up to half the revenue.)

There are hundreds of Groupon copycats willing to accept lower commissions, but many small businesses prefer to partner with larger companies such as Groupon and LivingSocial because they reach more potential customers.

Facebook will bring deals to even more people. While Groupon has 70 million members and LivingSocial has 28 million, Facebook has 500 million people worldwide.

Add to that the fact that many small businesses already have a Facebook presence, and the social network becomes a good fit for daily deals, says Greg Sterling, senior analyst for Opus Research.

As a share of overall Web surfing, visits to group-buying sites grew ten-fold over the past year, according to research firm Experian. LivingSocial had 7 million unique visitors in March, up 27 percent from February, making it one of the 10 fastest-growing websites in the U.S., according to ComScore.

"Groupon and LivingSocial have shown how much demand there is out there," Sterling says. "Facebook, if they do this right, can have a big hit on their hands."

View a screenshot from the Facebook Dealslanding page (below). To see more screenshots from this service, visit Mashable.

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(Ellen Gibson, AP/The Huffington Post) -- What happens when you cross the world's largest social network with one of the hottest business models in e-commerce? Facebook wants to find out. Facebook ...
(Ellen Gibson, AP/The Huffington Post) -- What happens when you cross the world's largest social network with one of the hottest business models in e-commerce? Facebook wants to find out. Facebook ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FaisalNahian
Ambitious, Optimist, and an Economist.
05:19 AM on 04/27/2011
It may have an impact this time.
04:36 PM on 04/26/2011
Groupon is going to kill itself - it doesn't need Facebook to do it.

http://mankabros.com/blogs/onmedea/2011/01/13/the-trouble-with-groupon/
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TDAllonsy
Freelance journalist, blogger, book lover
04:34 PM on 04/26/2011
Nope. Still not going to join Facebook.
04:32 PM on 04/26/2011
I wouldn't purchase any Facebook credit to use this service. I prefer to keep my currency as US dollars. thanks.
03:51 PM on 04/26/2011
"We're building a product that is social from the ground up," says Emily White, director of local for Facebook. "All of these deals are things you want to do with friends, so no teeth whitening, but yes to river rafting."

Most of the people on Facebook that we friend are from around the globe, or from our past. Those we see everyday, coworkers, best friends, etc. we don't really want to chat with them on facebook too, that's too much of the same person.

I don't want to bargain coupon with my online friends, coworkers or extended family. We keep track of each other online but we don't live alike at all. I'll skip this feature.
03:31 PM on 04/26/2011
I would delete my Facebook account but the wife would have a cow because of the pictures and such. I can assure you Facebook will never get between me and my money. They have proven to be untrustworthy. Besides, the coupon bubble is sure to burst sooner rather than later. As soon as the big boys weight in the market becomes diluted.
03:28 PM on 04/26/2011
Actually, I prefer Living Social to either of these.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
J0E1
Don't blame me, I'm not a republicrat.
03:27 PM on 04/26/2011
Who wants to bet groupon goes crawling back to google?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
uncc49er
03:46 PM on 04/26/2011
I bet. Groupon has no chance. Experts repeatedly say a good idea for a startup business is a simple idea. The problem is that a simple idea can be easily copied and pasted. The Groupon idea is simple, and everybody can copy it. I already know at least 5 to 6 companies in Boston area that have Groupon features beside their actual product. Gilt, Ruelala, living Social, Home run, and a few others.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gemini68
03:54 PM on 04/26/2011
Rue La La and Gilt are members only sites that have been around a long time.
12:10 AM on 04/27/2011
Gilt has ridiculous phony mark ups.
If you see something on Gilt - see what it's selling for on ebay.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HeatherRamone
Hey Ho! Let's Go!
04:20 PM on 04/26/2011
x2. Groupon passed up BILLIONS and for what? The only expansion plans I've heard them propose involve global expansion, whoopdeedoo, Facebook is already there. Timing is everything, and I bet had Groupon known about Facebook Deals' imminent launch, they would have accepted Google's buyout on the spot.
imonlyhereforthelaughs
Politicians...they ruin everything.
03:22 PM on 04/26/2011
Facebook will also be including all of your contact information so that "friends" can just show up on your doorstep to partake of your shared "Deal" deal. Because FB knows that is exactly what everyone wants automatically... unless you want to suffer through a dozen or so misdirects in order to opt out. Because a guy who had no firends growing up (don't believe the movie...just look at him...) knows everything there is to know about being social.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GaryNOVA
Fear My Micro-bio!!!!!!!!
02:16 PM on 04/26/2011
Has anyone else noticed that the Huffington post has never been right when defining something as a product "killer"?
02:14 PM on 04/26/2011
Re the Facebook/Wal-mart comparison, Wal-mart will stick to major metro areas. The economics are such that it can't survive in low populations. Facebook is the same way.. it'll wait till a business model proves successful (check-ins, daily deals) and swoop in.But niche sites and businesses that serve small communities will survive.

I completely agree that without innovation of its own, Facebook's growth and dominance will plateau.
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jonester
Politics: whining and compromises
01:37 PM on 04/26/2011
Another example of how big corporations ruin startups and small businesses.
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French Toast
MAPLE SYRUP
02:50 PM on 04/26/2011
To be fair they did get a very generous buyout offer from Google. Groupon made a calculated choice to remain independent.
01:18 PM on 04/26/2011
As much as I love Facebook, I'm sticking with Groupon when it comes to buying coupons. Facebook will never get my credit card information, screw that.
http://libertarians4freedom.blogspot.com/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Horatio
Wordsmith seeks others for salacious mental trysts
01:40 PM on 04/26/2011
#11
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gemini68
03:55 PM on 04/26/2011
Like your micro -bio
02:07 PM on 04/26/2011
EXACTLY my sentiments. Facebook has too many issues with maintaining it's users' privacy. No need to give them my credit card info as well.
01:14 PM on 04/26/2011
This is why Groupon should have just accepted Google's buyout. They will now be crushed by facebook.
01:13 PM on 04/26/2011
my only question here... how do i get this stupid facebook deals prompt off the top of my page.

NO mark, i don't want to sign up for your new service, please go away.