Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

Facebook is a mobile company – are you?

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Ashley Gilmour writes:

A quick fact: nearly half of Facebook’s advertising revenue now stems from mobile ads.

That’s right – of the social network’s $1.8 billion (£1.1 billion) generated in the third quarter of 2013, 49% of it was made up of mobile advertising revenue. Last year, the channel represented only 14%.

In January, Facebook chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg declared: “There's no argument, Facebook is a mobile company.”

Are you?  Mobile – particularly social through mobile – is increasingly emerging as one of the core digital avenues through which companies use a social media advertising agency to connect with consumers.

In the case of Facebook, it’s easy to see why the company is enjoying phenomenally strong mobile revenue. Its News Feed product – the central hub of the network – is seeing growth as advertisers start to switch from its right-hand ad column over to the middle.

Mobile is becoming big business because consumer behaviour is changing. A few years ago – and it’s easy to forget given its inexorable rise – mobile didn’t even exist.

Now, it’s commonplace for people to check social networks, read news and shop on their mobile phones, wherever they are – on the train, in the pub, on the couch at home. In 2013, there will be 30.9 million smartphone users in the UK, according to eMarketer.

Research this year from the Internet Advertising Bureau shows that mobile spend now accounts for 10% of overall digital spend, a figure only set to rise in the coming years as firms harness insight from a direct response advertising agency.

Today’s digital playground is more diverse today than it has ever been, with mobile making up just one important part of it. At first glance, the dizzying range of digital platforms might seem off-putting to companies looking to engage in this new and exciting sphere. But the investment is worth it.

Ashley Gilmour works at Accord, a direct response advertising agency for small and medium sized businesses.

Comments

Collapse Expand Comments (0)
You don't have permission to post comments.

Recent Podcasts

ExclusivePodcast - 8th February 2012

We start this week's podcast with a conversation about Facebook before moving on to the legal battle between Motorola and Apple, some interesting quarterly results, Google's Android watchdog, jobs, ads... and much more.

ExclusivePodcast - 1st February 2012

Apple, Samsung and Motorola have all published their quarterly results. We talk about these differing figures before moving on to O2's privacy problem, T-Mobile's new unlimited tariff, HP's plans for webOS and last year's growth in tablet sales.

ExclusivePodcast - 27th January 2012

James Rosewell introduces the 51Degrees.mobi Mobile Trends 2011 white paper, explaining how Apple's share of mobile web browsing is apparently falling. We also discuss several other mobile web trends in the document, which covers Europe, the USA and India.

ExclusivePodcast - 25th January 2012

We start this week's show with news of RIM's new CEO before moving on to another big-name departure at Yahoo. Then it's time for some impressive financial results, a new m-commerce device and a mobile phone insurance fraudster.

RSS
First3839404143454647Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«May 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
1234567

Archive