Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Facebook incognito in China

Partner’s ad sales generate big cash

- PAUL MOZUR AND LIN QIQING

SHENZHEN, China — Facebook’s apps and websites have been blocked in China for years. The company has no office in the country that supports its social networking services. And its attempts to open a subsidiary have been quickly snuffed out.

But in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, Facebook has managed to quietly build a presence with the help of a local partner.

In Shenzhen’s Futian district, on the ninth floor of a concrete tower, there is an open-air sales floor that works as a sort of corporate embassy for the social network. The 5,000-squarefoot space is run by the local partner, called Meet Social, but has been designed with Facebook’s guidance. It functions as an experience center for the Silicon Valley giant — the only one of its type in the world.

Its small size belies a crucial, and often overlooked, part of Facebook’s business. The center — which looks as if it fell out of Silicon Valley, with stenciled paintings of chat boxes on the walls, a lit-up heart icon and a pristine billiards table — hosts prospectiv­e clients and curious customers who wish

to advertise on Facebook to reach the network’s 2.3 billion users, most of whom live outside China.

The desire by Chinese companies and other entities to get in front of people internatio­nally has turned China into one of Facebook’s largest sources of advertisin­g revenue, even though the social network itself is not available in the country. Charles Shen, chief executive of Meet Social, said his company anticipate­d doing $1 billion to $2 billion in ad sales on Facebook and Instagram this year. Each day, he added, Meet Social’s software puts up about 20,000 Chinese ads on Facebook.

In total, Facebook’s revenue from Chinese-based advertiser­s reached an estimated $5 billion in 2018, or about 10 percent of its total sales, according to Pivotal Research Group. That would be enough to rank Facebook somewhere around the seventh-largest listed Internet company in China.

The experience center is also a strange testament to the borders that China has drawn across the Internet. With its “Great Firewall” of Internet filters that China used to block Facebook in 2009, the Chinese government has cut the digital abstractio­ns of a global informatio­n network along geographic lines. That has necessitat­ed Facebook’s creation of the center, where Chinese who have hardly any experience with the social network can learn about it and figure out how to advertise on it.

“The experience center is for inviting potential clients to see how Facebook ads work,” Shen said in an interview, adding that Facebook provided much of the materials in the office, while his company staffed it.

Meet Social, an advertisin­g agency, worked with Facebook to open the center in the spring. While many Chinese have not used Facebook, that does not prevent them from knowing about it, Shen said. He said his company got plenty of inbound interest from clients, even though it does little advertisin­g about itself.

“Most of the time, it’s them who come to us,” Shen said. He said his firm had set up a system so that Chinese clients didn’t have to leap the Great Firewall to register an advertisin­g account on Facebook. To do so, it uses a service provided by a state-run telecom company to legally jump the Internet filters.

Facebook employees come to the center to give talks, Shen said. Since many Chinese cannot access facebook.com — even if they type it into their phones while in the experience center, the site remains blocked

— Meet Social provides videos on giant phone-shaped screens so people can get a better sense of Facebook’s ad offerings. Examples of paid posts from Chinese brands are framed on the walls. Training in marketing and advertisin­g strategies on Facebook’s platforms is also offered.

Jeffery Hong, a sales director at a wig company, which he declined to name, said he first thought of advertisin­g on Facebook when he went to a salon run by Meet Social in Shenzhen in 2015.

Hong previously had mostly done overseas sales through Alibaba, China’s biggest ecommerce site. In the years that followed, he attended training sessions and talks by Facebook employees, including at the experience center, on an array of subjects including how to offer a good user experience and how to make ads.

Now Facebook ads attract buyers to his company’s site that account for about 10 percent of sales. While the company manages its own Facebook site, it also allows Meet Social to take over the page and to troublesho­ot difficulti­es and keep up with ad trends.

“We want to establish our brand, let more and more people know about us,” Hong said. “It’s pretty effective to put ads on Facebook; the site has a lot of traffic. Many people in the West use Facebook.”

Meet Social is one of seven official Facebook advertisin­g resellers in China. Others serve much the same role. Often their presence is welcome because even for tech sophistica­tes, doing business across the Great Firewall can be tricky.

Ben Liu, 35, an entreprene­ur and a former Alibaba employee, said the Facebook page he had set up for his electric skateboard company, Maxfind, was blocked in 2017 by the social network. He suspects that his employees signed in and out of the company’s Facebook account from personal accounts, and all of that activity caused the company’s page to be flagged as suspicious.

Now Liu uses a Facebook agent similar to Meet Social. Maxfind spends around $100 to $200 a day on Facebook and has considered shelling out more for a U.S. ad agency to spiff up its brand building, he said.

Advertisin­g on Facebook has also shown him how much of a cultural gap can exist between China and the rest of the world.

One of Maxfind’s Facebook ads fell afoul of copyright claims for music it used in the ad, he said. And Liu said he was surprised when another of his ads on the social network was blocked by the company for being discrimina­tory. The ad had used the term “fat.”

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