i don't understand how anyone can think FB is worth 100 billion - or even more if they want to make money from it.
its insane.
Focused advertising stream that most retards check 20+ time a day.

But yeah not sure that equals 100bn somehow... maybe..
i don't understand how anyone can think FB is worth 100 billion - or even more if they want to make money from it.
its insane.
i don't understand how anyone can think FB is worth 100 billion - or even more if they want to make money from it.
its insane.
I had a conversation about this. It works out that every person's profile is worth about $100. If you were an advertiser and you had access to people's like/dislikes, what brands they like and are a fan of, what events they go to etc. Would that be worth $100 to you? Very possibly.
Personally, I think the valuation is still over hyped, but that's not to say that Facebook isn't a potentially very valuable company.
Why can't people see that information is not worth that much unless you have a complete picture of the info.
If you used my facebook profile to market to me you would be wasting all your money. You would target all the wrong things and waste all that money.
$100 per person, how much would they have to sell to every person on facebook. $1000 dollars worth of goods to every single person maybe. Based on the fact that facebook has a conversion rate 10 times worse than googles for advertising I can't see it.
Why can't people see that information is not worth that much unless you have a complete picture of the info.
If you used my facebook profile to market to me you would be wasting all your money. You would target all the wrong things and waste all that money.
$100 per person, how much would they have to sell to every person on facebook. $1000 dollars worth of goods to every single person maybe. Based on the fact that facebook has a conversion rate 10 times worse than googles for advertising I can't see it.
It's not $100 per profile for you as an advertiser. It's $100 per profile to Facebook, ergo all potential advertisers. As for conversion rates etc, that may be something that Facebook can improve on.
It's not $100 per profile for you as an advertiser. It's $100 per profile to Facebook, ergo all potential advertisers. As for conversion rates etc, that may be something that Facebook can improve on.
Well GM dropped their facebook advertising account (which was worth millions) stating that they simply didn't work. I can see the attraction to hundreds of millions of people, but advertising simply doesn't work very well on FB. Then they will implement it on mobile devices and make it more annoying.
More and more larger companies will drop out of the advertising platform of FB leaving the price to be driven down.
It is a successful business and it will continue to grow, it was just way over valued initially.
Exactly - if you have 20 advertisers targeting each person, $5 per profile isn't a ludicrous figure.
How much money have you parted with, directly or indirectly, when using facebook though? I accidentally clicked an advert once. I have no idea what it's worth but $100 per profile sounds like the kinda nonsense we heard during the dot-com bubble.
How much money have you parted with, directly or indirectly, when using facebook though? I accidentally clicked an advert once. I have no idea what it's worth but $100 per profile sounds like the kinda nonsense we heard during the dot-com bubble.
I bet you would struggle to find a person who actually clicked an advert without it beeign a mistake
You need to learn to stop talking about which you know nothing (in fact, is it possible to have negative knowledge? Like religious people?)internet adverts are the biggest crock of ****
I bet you would struggle to find a person who actually clicked an advert without it beeign a mistake
that doesn't mean it's not highly profitable.
snip
Facebook is currently about '$1 profitable' per-profile. So yes, far-fetched.Obviously but $100 per profile profitable? When it's hard to find anyone that actually interacts with facebook's revenue streams I find that figure very far-fetched.
Oh I'm not saying that $100bn is an accurate figure and I agree that Facebook's current ad system is not particularly novel or likely to make me buy things. However, the potential for really well-targeted adverts due to all the information they have about you is huge.
I think there is a lot of scope for developing the user information. I think this goes far beyond what people list as their interests, talk about or are a fan of. For example, Facebook could use image-recognition technology on peoples photos/photo-likes and glean information on a potentially unlimited number of product angles. Imagine if an advertiser could see how many people have their bottle of vodka on their table in clubs, and what type of clubs, how old the people are, what gender, geographical location and so on, without the need for any interaction with the consumer. It could be an extremely in-depth way of assessing a product market and best of all it could be done far faster than normal market research.
None of that actually needs users to click on anything.