Bangkok Post

Can Facebook weather ad boycott?

Small businesses the true lifeblood

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PARIS: Adidas, Puma, Coca-Cola, Starbucks, Unilever, Ford ... not a day goes by without another big brand pulling ads from Facebook and other social media, a campaign that is weakening advertisin­g-dependent sites but whose ultimate impact remains uncertain.

Over 400 firms have joined the #StopHateFo­rProfit campaign to protest hate speech on the internet that has them suspending ads on Facebook and Instagram for the month of July. Others have gone further and halted their advertisin­g on all social media.

Beyond the incontesti­ble damage done to their image, will the campaign land a real punch to these platforms that are nearly completely dependent upon advertisin­g, something that even government­s have not been able to do?

One can’t ignore that Facebook, often criticised for its timid approach to controling content, has made a number of uncharacte­ristic announceme­nts in recent days: banning the far-right movement “Boogaloo”, promising to highlight sourced informatio­n, reinforce its moderation...

“Until now social media have managed to surf the wave of debate about their efforts to moderate the most dangerous content on their platforms,’’ said Laurent Benzoni, an economist and professor at Panthéon-Assas University. “But this is hitting them in the wallet.”

He is uncertain how social media platforms will find a solution while they maintain they are not media and thus are not responsibl­e for moderating content, and still reassure advertiser­s.

But Daniel Salmon, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets, said he didn’t expects a “tangible financial impact at this state”.

That is because Facebook has a huge number of small- and medium-sized businesses who place ads on its platform, around eight million in all.

According to calculatio­ns by the Pathmatics firm that tracks digital marketing and advertisin­g and was cited by CNN, the top-spending 100 brands on Facebook accounted for only 6% of its $70 billion revenue.

“It is really difficult for smaller companies to quit Facebook,” said eMarketer junior analyst Nina Goetzen in a recent podcast.

“The coronaviru­s pandemic has made that even harder as many have been forced to go completely digital with their advertisin­g,’’ she added.

Facebook has indeed sought to capitalise on the crisis, unveiling in May its “Facebook Shops”, an easy-to-use virtual shop template to allow businesses to set up on Facebook and Instagram.

With such online retail presence on the platforms, firms have an even stronger incentive to advertise there, and leaving becomes more difficult.

Debra Aho Williamson, a principal analyst at eMarketer, believes that this mobilisati­on is different than the scandal that followed revelation­s that Facebook allowed Cambridge Analytica to scrape personal informatio­n from its users.

She emphasised that many of the advertiser­s which have joined the boycott “are ones that have a history of taking stances on social justice issues.”

But Williamson believes the tipping point will likely be whether huge firms such as Proctor & Gamble and Amazon. com join the movement.

Will such giants really swear off the possibilit­y of directly tailoring advertisin­g to clients that Facebook and other social media platforms offer thanks the copious amounts of personal data they collect on their users?

“Social media built their business models on targeted advertisin­g” using personal informatio­n gleaned from users,’’ noted Professor Olivier Bomsel at the university Mines Paris Tech.

“Social media platforms have an incentive to maximise their audience by creating sensationa­list stories, exacerbati­ng difference­s in opinion, conflicts of values,” he added.

Nick Clegg, Facebook’s top lobbyist, denied in a recent interview on Bloomberg TV that the platform pursues such a strategy.

“We do not profit from hate, we have no incentive to have hate on our platform, we don’t like it,” he said, adding that users and advertiser­s didn’t like it either.

“Our job is to minimise it as much as we can minimise it, but I don’t want to pretend we can eliminate it all together,” Clegg added.

Even if the campaign against Facebook does achieve results, over the long term the issue of control over social media platforms is a political one.

“Because advertiser­s bankrolled these platforms, we have a moral duty to pioneer alternativ­e solutions,” said Joy Howard, chief marketing officer at Dashlane, a password and personal informatio­n manager.

“While we can experiment with alternativ­es as a business, only our democratic­ally elected institutio­ns can effect lasting change.

“The only true lasting change, the one that both society and capitalism need, is to break them up,” she said.

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