What’s A Facebook Fan Worth? Definitely Not $3.60!

Last week, Mashable published an article about the value of a Facebook fan.  This article has been shared thousands of times and reposted all over the marketingverse, and I’m terrified by the implications of how may people have read it (more on that later). Using a CPM model, Vitrue calculated that a Facebook fan is worth $3.60.  Here’s the math: from: Mashable There’s one problem: This is NOT how Facebook works. This statistic reinforces one of the most common misconceptions about social media.  A misconception near-and-dear to people who think in TRPs and GRPs that is so flawed that it threatens to destabilize your efforts on Facebook and potentially reward bad behavior by community managers. This statistic puts a value on 1-way communication and totally overlooks the core of a good Facebook campaign. Engagement When working in social spaces, engagement is key.  Lets say you have a million fans and you post daily.  By some miracle you get a 100% impression rate, but only 5 likes and 5 comments.  The bulk of those million impressions came from people scrolling through their newsfeed where your post is likely sandwiched between posts by friends, other brands and in the worst case scenario a note that a friend has engaged with your competitor.  Few intelligent media buyers would pay $5 CPM for this kind of cluttered and shared text-only inventory. In this case, you had 10 meaningful engagements and a boatload of mediocre impressions, especially since you probably got most of your fans through an engagement block that allowed people to become fans without ever visiting your page.  Your 1MM fans are hardly worth $3.60 a piece at a 0.001% engagement rate.  If you were buying banner inventory and had a 0.001% engagement or click-thru rate, you’d move your money elsewhere, but by Vitrue’s logic each of these fans is still worth $3.60 However, when someone comments on your wall or likes a post or uses an app, their activity is shared on their newsfeed.  All of their friends see someone they know, and hopefully trust, engaging with your brand, which is effectively an endorsement.  Most brand activity in social spaces is not instigated by brands.  It’s people asking their peers for advice, and a personal endorsement is the best you can hope for. So how do you measure

Google Buzz Comments Are Collapsible Now

Finally, Google has addressed one of the Buzz kills we mentioned a long time ago – making buzz posts with tons of comments collapsible. According to Google when there are enough comments on Buzz posts, these may be collapsed based on the following details: 3 or more previous or new comments are collapsed into a group latest previous comment  (from before the last visit) was left expanded for more context last two new comments (since last visit) are expanded to give a taste of ongoing conversation that you might find interesting previous and new comments are collapsed together into a single line to save space names of some of the people whose comments are collapsed are displayed to give you a chance to dive into the conversation if you it interesting All in all, these changes limit the space a post takes up in the Google Buzz tab and prevent popular posts which you might find not interesting at all from dominating your Buzz stream. Of course, the ultimate effect would be making Google Buzz a little less noisy. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Google Buzz Comments Are Collapsible

Weekly Search & Social News: 02/23/2010

Welcome to another edition of ‘ 7 Days of Search and Social ‘ – it was a fairly quiet week out on the trails last week and there reall were no real ‘zinger’ stories that got the search world in a tizzy (who knew? woulda’ been a great week for some link bait). Heck, even Google was quiet. It seems like they’re announcing something or another on weekly basis; slackers. But never fear my fine optimizing geeks, due to the bloated nature of my Google Reader this ALWAYS plenty of reading for ye’ll even in a slow week. If I had to pick a fav it would be the whole kerfufful surrounding the ‘500 Fortune companies don’t get SEO’ bit… time to put on the sales hats and hit up the big boys! Are you ready to rumble? Let’s get it on! Lead