Wednesday, June 27, 2007

UK: Google: pole position, Facebook: shooting star

News today that Google has managed to hold on to its top spot yet again in the rankings for most visited web property in the UK, bringing in some 28m visitors to its web sites in May 07, according to figures from comScore. Microsoft and eBay were ranked second and third, with 27.4m and 22.2m respective visitors to their sites. Yahoo was in fourth place with an estimated 20.6m visitors.

Interesting to note that Facebook had the biggest growth in traffic of all sites. Between April and May of this year, traffic on the social network went up by 30%, and comScore says Facebook's traffic has gone up by 2,123% over the last year. Despite this, with visitor numbers totalling 4.8m for the month of May, Facebook still doesn't make the top-20 rankings for the UK.

Part of the explosive growth surely must be down to the company having recently opened the site to new members--in the past it was restricted to people with college/university email addresses. That makes me wonder whether its growth will be sustainable in the longer term.

The way Facebook allows users to invite the entirety of their email address books in one click has definitely been used a lot lately. I'm not a high-volume Internet community type myself, but even I have had loads emails saying I've been added as a Facebook friend to other people's pages. (Each invite requires me to click in and approve the friendship, meaning more traffic for Facebook.)

When Google bought YouTube in 2006, there was a lot of speculation over whether Yahoo or a big media player would buy up Facebook. Founder Mark Zuckerberg has said he doesn't want to sell, but if this momentum keeps up beyond the 'signing up' stage, I won't be at all surprised if this actually happens.

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Monday, May 21, 2007

Facebook: a new social media ad model

Following on from Rob's post on the growth of Internet advertising, a lot of people have been noting how ad spend online is still wildly disproportionate to the amount of people surfing the net and spending time online.

One area this is particularly true is social networking, where sites like MySpace and Bebo are drawing in huge crowds but not the ad dollars to match it (although this is growing I hear).

Now one of their newer competitors, Facebook, is getting ready to initiate a new spin on how to promote brands and products on social networks: sell pages to partners like Amazon and Apple and Ebay (I guess...), where they can create portals to sell their wares, and then make it possible for Facebook members to embed into their pages links/portals/widgets to links to these. According to this article Facebook won't be taking a cut from the sales so presumably they will be charging a pretty penny for the privilege of accessing Facebook users (anonymously of course).

(I'm still waiting for a reply from Facebook about all this directly. Will post it here when/if I get it.)

From what I understand this isn't being done by the other sites yet but if the premium on these sites is their dedicated eyeball count, then this could be a good way of capitalising on it.

And it positions a social network like Facebook in a new position as a portal of sorts, like Google or Yahoo but more recommended.

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