Blog

When Your Favorite Social Media Network Monetizes (Spoiler: It sucks)

Date
17 Dec 2013
Author
Brandon
Please Pay Here sign

I was not one of the people who was excited when Facebook went public. I wasn’t about to buy stock (maybe because I remember MySpace?), and I didn’t like the prospects as a user, either”from a personal perspective or as a marketer.

So I wasn’t really surprised to hear that Facebook has finally admitted what we’ve long seen coming: If you want to reach your followers on Facebook, you’re going to have to pay for the privilege. Even if you already paid to acquire the fans.

Personally, I find this disappointing as a user. I follow pages on Facebook because I want to see their updates. I follow NPR and my favorite bloggers because I want their updates. I follow Warby Parker because I want to see when they release a new line. In fact, just this weekend, I updated my New Yorker subscription thanks to a Facebook status update the magazine posted with a great deal. I don’t only want to see the Facebook status updates of the brand pages that can afford to pay for reach. I want to see them all”or most of them, anyway.

But what does this organic reach problem mean for marketers? First, it means we’re going to have to stop thinking of social media as a “free marketing channel.” You’re going to have to spend in order to be successful in social, whether it’s on good creative so you have knockout visual content or whether it’s on social media ads. Honestly, it’s probably both.

Second, it means it’s more important than ever to diversify your social presence. Brands that think they can simply throw up a Facebook page and check off the “social media” box are going to be sorry.

But there is hope. Take this little factoid and chew on it for a bit: Pinterest drives more traffic to publishers than LinkedIn, Twitter and Reddit”combined.

Subscribe to our Newsletter
Don't miss out on our latest news and commentary and white papers, subscribe to our newsletter now!
You may also like
person typing on computer
Blog

Search Intent SEO Strategy That Drives Rankings and Conversions

A search intent SEO strategy that aligns your content format, structure, and depth with what users are actually asking can boost rankings and conversions. 
AI robots
Blog

AI in Digital Advertising Is Changing How Brands Buy and Optimize Ads

For years, media buying relied on delayed insights and manual decisions. Teams would launch campaigns, monitor performance, and adjust after the fact. That gap between action and insight often meant wasted spend and missed opportunities.
Travel - airplane
Blog

How Personalized Marketing Drives Guest Retention for Travel and Tourism Brands

Travel brands spend enormous budgets attracting new visitors. Yet many overlook the strategy that drives the highest long term value: guest retention.
HTC
man sitting on tin foil couch
Momentum built fast. The message connected, engagement climbed, and more consumers started rethinking their choice.
Idahoan Foods
Family in kitchen making potatoes
The campaign quickly gained traction. Traffic surged, engagement climbed, and Idahoan started showing up as a true weeknight dinner hero.