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Mark Zuckerberg Outlines Facebook's Key Priorities

Reuters  |  By Posted: 05/11/2012 4:30 pm Updated: 05/13/2012 12:07 am


* Plenty of Q&A time in Palo Alto

* Zuckerberg addresses key mobile strategy concern

* Will growth concerns dampen IPO demand?

By Alistair Barr

PALO ALTO, Calif., May 11 (Reuters) - Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, whose limited role in promoting the No. 1 social network's market debut has drawn criticism, laid out its growth strategy to investors on Friday, saying that transforming its mobile and advertising experience are top priorities in 2012.

Integrating online apps more strongly into Facebook is also a major goal, he told hundreds of investors at an event that capped the first week of Facebook's cross-country "roadshow" to pitch its highly anticipated initial public offering.

Facebook aims to raise about $10.6 billion, dwarfing the coming-out parties of tech companies like Google Inc and valuing it at up to $96 billion - rivaling Amazon.com Inc's .

Zuckerberg, 27, who started Facebook in his Harvard dorm room 8 years ago, said Facebook's key priorities in 2012 were to improve its mobile application, to build stronger ties incorporating its social network with other online apps and to create a "transformative" advertising experience.

The company is "just getting started" with its mobile app, said Zuckerberg, who appeared on stage in a grey T-shirt and dark trousers at Palo Alto's Crowne Plaza, flanked by Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg and finance chief David Ebersman.

With 900 million users, Facebook is the world's dominant social network. Zuckerberg was Time Magazine's Person of the Year in 2010 and was depicted in the fictionalized 2010 movie "The Social Network".

"Over the next 10 years or so, every consumer category should be transformed to be built around people," Zuckerberg told fund managers and Silicon Valley glitterati such as Netscape co-founder and venture capitalist Marc Andreessen.

"People will listen to music and watch TV with other people" through Facebook.

"We only recently reached this tipping point," Zuckerberg said as the audience consumed a lunch of curried chicken salad and chocolate-chip cookies.

"It is a bit of a celebrity event," said Alice Evans with London-based F & C Asset Management. "You're not expecting to learn that much but it's as close as you can get to kicking the tires."




NO STOPPING IT?

Wall Street had been concerned about the company's ability to wring revenue from mobile users, considered crucial for long-term growth, as well as slowing growth in Facebook's main advertising business.

But that may not dampen demand for shares of the high-flying Web company, which is as much a cultural phenomenon as it is a business success story. On Thursday, a source close to the process told Reuters its IPO was already oversubscribed, a week before final pricing.

Facebook has indicated an IPO price range of $28 to $35 a share on Thursday, which would value the company at $77 billion to $96 billion.

Zuckerberg - sans his trademark "hoodie" sweatshirt - made brief introductory comments at the event, which took place 8 miles from Facebook's new Menlo Park headquarters at One Hacker Way, before opening the session up to questions.

The company had provoked some grumbles from investors earlier this week, when it took limited questions from the audience at an event in New York. And Zuckerberg skipped other stops on the roadshow this week, such Boston.

Investors managed to get in more than 10 questions at Friday's event, ranging from capital spending to regulation, even as Facebook maintained tight control over the proceedings, forbidding follow-up questions.

Zuckerberg and Sandberg said Facebook's overall advertising business was gaining steam, with increased spending by most of its marketers. The two executives highlighted social ads as an important tool for Facebook to tackle its mobile challenge.

The ads, which incorporate information about Facebook users' friends who "like" certain products, are better suited to the smaller screens of smartphones, from which more than half of Facebook's users access the service, executives said.

As Facebook collects more user data, such as location, it will be able to offer more relevant mobile ads, executives said.

Asked about Facebook's $1 billion purchase of mobile app maker Instagram, its largest acquisition, Zuckerberg said the deal was under consideration for one to two months before it occurred. Media reports had said it was forged over a weekend.

The number of Instagram users has already grown from 30 million to 50 million since the deal was announced in early April, he noted.

Facebook's offering marks a watershed moment for the new generation of Web companies that are challenging established players such as Google and Yahoo for consumers' online time and for advertising dollars.

The company's shares, which will be listed on Nasdaq under the symbol FB, could begin trading as soon as May 18.

"They did a good job of addressing the tough questions. They have a clear vision," said one investor who attended the event but did not want to be named.

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* Plenty of Q&A time in Palo Alto * Zuckerberg addresses key mobile strategy concern * Will growth concerns dampen IPO demand? By Alistair Barr ...
* Plenty of Q&A time in Palo Alto * Zuckerberg addresses key mobile strategy concern * Will growth concerns dampen IPO demand? By Alistair Barr ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Johnangry
Outrageous statements spark good convo!!
08:42 PM on 05/29/2012
I just came back from McDonald's. I think I'll use the change to buy 1,000 shares of FB.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:29 PM on 05/13/2012
In my opinion Facebook has reached it's peak already. To grow any further it would need to include features that invade our privacy more than it already has. In essence, Facebook is trying to be the next Google - a one stop landing page for all Internet experience.
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Joseph Norton
25 to life+10.
04:39 PM on 05/13/2012
His sister left the company early to create a data company with facebook members,be afraid.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Johnangry
Outrageous statements spark good convo!!
08:43 PM on 05/29/2012
So, they're taking the money and making a new company? That's horrible.
10:03 AM on 05/13/2012
Facebook is on the downhill side of its existence.
Thousands of people everyday realize what a huge mistake it is to permanently turn over their private information, free of charge, for marketing purposes.
08:28 PM on 05/13/2012
only a fool will use their real information.
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Boissiere Parker
This isn't a term paper so stop correcting me!
09:44 AM on 05/13/2012
I am so over Facebook right now. However, I can't bring myself to delete my acct, go figure....
lurkinman
Clear thinking is best served non-partisan
09:51 AM on 05/13/2012
I haven't logged onto mine in the best part of a year. I used to be really active and then, for some reason, lost interest in the whole thing.
08:31 PM on 05/13/2012
there is no way to delete your account. you can deactivate it but once you receive activity such a message or poke your account is reactivated without your knowledge.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Boissiere Parker
This isn't a term paper so stop correcting me!
09:30 PM on 05/13/2012
Wow, that suxs!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robjh1
We Have Met the Enemy and he is Us: Pogo
09:28 AM on 05/13/2012
I can't get passed him not wearing a suit to Wall Street for his IPO intro. Sure to some it's no big deal but come on. For some reason his behavior reminds me of the spoiled brats during the dot.com area. They made demands from their bosses that were over the top: pay for our dry cleaning and rides home better yet bring the dry cleaning to us and we need a gym and food services on site etc. (if they didn't get it they would walk to the competitor and work there) In the end it all went up in smoke.

Arrogance with ignorance is a dangerous combination. Just saying.
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09:42 AM on 05/13/2012
He is untouchable and he knows and pushes this. If you were the top guy in one of the top enterprises today and of all time.... who would YOU answer to? He doesn't have to play the game or conform to anything... he is RICH RICH RICH and getting richer. Bottom line: ZUCKERBURG (whom I personally think is a snot nosed wet behind the ears exploitative PUNK, btw) is in it to win, which he is doing just fine. Sorry, but you statement is not realistic at all.
lurkinman
Clear thinking is best served non-partisan
09:50 AM on 05/13/2012
When was the last time anyone ever saw Steve Jobs in anything but that black shirt and jeans?

It's their costume.
08:58 AM on 05/13/2012
FB used to a user friendly and easy to use fun. It's now harder to use and not so much fun.
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08:25 PM on 05/12/2012
beat those drums, little man, to try to roust up the bux from the brokerage and investment houses------------here we have the classic case of you can fool some of the people some of the time , but not all the people all the time---------true, it sometimes takes a while for this to unravel
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05:43 PM on 05/12/2012
I have never been a fan of Facebook mainly because of its sloppy handling of privacy, but its technical challenges are interesting, particularly the scaling issue.
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mjcc1987
You can't have everything. Where would you put it?
05:12 PM on 05/12/2012
Priorities for 2012

1 through 65 - Money
66 - sell your information for money
67 - spy on you and sell that information for money
67 - 100 see above

Note to self - why do I always have to pay for sex?

Smooches, Mark
lurkinman
Clear thinking is best served non-partisan
09:46 AM on 05/13/2012
Great post, I was thinking the same thing. Fanned, especially for your mini-bio.