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GM Pulled Ads From Facebook After Social Network's Failed Pitch: Report

Reuters  |  By Posted: Updated: 05/18/2012 10:56 pm


By Ben Klayman and Bernie Woodall

DETROIT/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Facebook may only have itself to blame for why General Motors rained on its IPO parade this week.

GM announced the decision to drop Facebook paid ads on Tuesday in what was the first highly visible crack in Facebook's strategy and illustrated doubts about its perceived advantage over traditional media.

GM's decision followed Facebook officials' failure to convince top marketing executives at the U.S. automaker of the benefits of Facebook's paid ads at a meeting that took place in the past few weeks, people familiar with the meeting said on Thursday.

That was after Facebook officials focused more on touting the social networking website's free pages, the sources said.

"It kind of backfires on them in a funny way," said one of the sources, who asked not to be identified, of the emphasis on the free pages.

News of the meeting, which sources said took place at Facebook's Menlo Park, California, headquarters, comes on the eve of its much-anticipated market debut. The company on Thursday priced its initial public offering at the top of its target range and is set to raise up to $18.4 billion.

Facebook and GM declined to comment about the meeting or their relationship.

GM dropped its Facebook ads because they were less effective than other options such as Google's AdSense, the sources said. Facebook's ads garner about half the clicks per page view, a measure of effectiveness, compared with the average website.

Moreover, Facebook's ad prices were expected to rise after the company's IPO. Ad prices are set in auction and vary depending on the target audience.

Some investors fear Facebook has not yet determined how to make money from the growing number of users who access the website from their smart phones. Further, revenue growth from its ad business has slowed in recent months.

However, Facebook boosted the price and the size of the offering earlier this week, underscoring investor enthusiasm for the company's shares despite ongoing questions about its long-term money-making capabilities.

During the meeting with GM, Facebook officials emphasized the lure of free posted content on their website, the sources said. By contrast, the ads looked "kind of meager and perhaps expensive by comparison," one source said.

'SEE IF IT WORKS'

GM, the third-largest U.S. advertiser, will still maintain Facebook pages, which cost nothing to create and for which it pays no fees, to market its vehicles.

Sources said GM's decision was not permanent and the Detroit automaker could buy Facebook ads in the future.

"They're just going to try not doing it for a while and see how it goes; just make content and if it works, it works," one source said.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has said in the run-up to the IPO that the company was built to accomplish a "social mission," but has also ranked creating a "transformative" advertising experience as a top priority.

But so far, Facebook's "click-through rate", also known as "clicks per page view," is half the average for ads on the Internet, according to Larry Kim, founder and chief technology officer of Internet ad consultant Wordstream.

The average targeted ad on the Internet is "clicked" on by a consumer once every 1,000 times it is viewed, Kim said. Facebook's rate is half that, while Google's is 4 in 1,000.

"Facebook is good in that an advertiser can target based on age and gender by measuring certain 'likes,' but is not connecting with the right audience at the right time," he said, calling the website's banner ads staid and uninspiring.

Google's banner ads are more targeted, even following a consumer from website to website, Kim said.

GM, which ranks behind Procter & Gamble Co and AT&T Inc in U.S. advertising spending, spent $1.1 billion on U.S. ads last year, according to ad-tracking firm Kantar Media. It spent about $271 million on online display and search ads excluding Facebook advertising.

(Additional reporting By Alexei Oreskovic in San Francisco and Deepa Seetharaman in Detroit; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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By Ben Klayman and Bernie Woodall DETROIT/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Facebook may only have itself to blame for why General Motors rained on its IPO parade this week. GM announ...
By Ben Klayman and Bernie Woodall DETROIT/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Facebook may only have itself to blame for why General Motors rained on its IPO parade this week. GM announ...
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11:37 AM on 05/23/2012
GM Likely Bought Cheap Traffic to Juice Fan Count Rather Than Targeting Fans Most Likely to Buy Vehicles

http://maximizesocialmedia.com/social-media-agency-says-gm-facebook-fans-from-iran
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cmr11
how do you want it
02:25 PM on 05/18/2012
this is going to crash big time and these boys will be off in another country counting their money......... pay up suckers!!
01:31 PM on 05/18/2012
If you made a great product, it would sell itself.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SidTheScienceKid
Science!
01:46 PM on 05/18/2012
Naive and wrong thinking on your part.
01:31 PM on 05/18/2012
I do not see how my random videos i post on fb and well wishes to friends is money making at all. I love fb but i do not click on anything ever since they started sending me friend recommendations for people i emailed, creepy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gurus4You
Don't be Republican or Democrat, be Objective!
11:52 AM on 05/18/2012
GM is the harbinger of things to come for facebook and its investors because FB's business model is a thing of fantasy - worse than those in the Dot-Com bust of 2000. People use facebook for a variety of things, but not to conduct business...there are already established companies like Amazon and ebay to support these transactions.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Randy Bettis
11:47 AM on 05/18/2012
Knowing the business acumen of GM, if they are out, I am in!!!
11:42 AM on 05/18/2012
Good for GM it says to me that GM, finally, is thinking outside the box and someone at GM has figured out that this is not a good use of their money. It is decisions like this that just may keep GM a leader.
11:35 AM on 05/18/2012
After trading in a GMC Acadia that had 16 warranty repairs in three years I think they need to spend some money on engineers and forget advertising. Don't need to advertise as much if you make a good product for a good price.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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AVoiceInThe Darkness
Darkness is your candle - Rumi
10:49 AM on 05/18/2012
For those of us who remember magazine ads before the internet browser was invented, the plethora of ads online, from normal or borderline shady, rarely seem worthy of attention. Instead many seem like ramped up versions of the micro ads found in the back sections of those old tymie style mags, just shy of promoting xray glasses and art tests. Smart advertisers should consider effectiveness before dumping huge advertising sums on a site.
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Chi Epsilon
An independent, fiscally-conservative liberal
11:29 AM on 05/18/2012
They used to put advertising on ammunition cartridges? I am a gun collector and have never seen a magazine with the ads on it like you speak of. (just kiddin - I ordered those X-ray glasses)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mpstar
10:48 AM on 05/18/2012
Gm did the right thing,,no one looks the ads,,,Facebook after today has nothing to offer,,,,The only thing it will keep up the intrest to the stockholders,,It will have to sell your information to other companies,,That's the only product they will have after todays stock explosion,,The buyer wil have to resell it quickly,,,,,
10:47 AM on 05/18/2012
pop the fakebubble like a pimple
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Chi Epsilon
An independent, fiscally-conservative liberal
10:46 AM on 05/18/2012
Facebook is just a data-mining site that is just teaching people how to be unsociable. Put down the damn phone/laptop and actually go SEE a friend.

Chi Epsilon LIKES this!
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CosmicFreddy
Anthropocene: will be the shortest epoch ever...
01:09 PM on 05/18/2012
Says chi as he types in a reply on the internet. :)

Just messing with ya. Totally agree on the data-mining part anyway.
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Chi Epsilon
An independent, fiscally-conservative liberal
02:00 PM on 05/18/2012
LOL - I was thinkin that while I was typing, but I justified it because I'm at work..!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
William Brock
10:25 AM on 05/18/2012
This is Facebook's last ditch effort to ring every last dollar out of this usless site. I would run very fast unless you want to loose your money during this "much created hype" by the 1% to take your money and leave you with an empty bag, as usual. Don't fall for any of this folks, it's so not kool!
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sjk1
10:22 AM on 05/18/2012
I like Facebook.
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homer winslow
Truth in Beauty, Beauty in Truth
01:12 PM on 05/18/2012
I like real people.
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10:19 AM on 05/18/2012
Having been a long time user of the internet I find I can totally disregard all ads. Most are comeons and a waste of time. Same with TV.