Monetization makes you do crazy things, and none perhaps so crazy as Facebook encouraging users to promote their own lives so as to make them stand out among their friends. The promoted posts trials allowing individuals to highlight particular updates for a fee is one of the odder transitions from business Facebook use to personal users; meanwhile, founder Mark Zuckerberg tells BusinessWeek heâs âoptimisticâ about mobile monetization, but falls short of actually outlining Facebookâs plans to squeeze cash out of the 600m mobile users.

Asked about where the next big jump in user figures will come from, Zuckerberg highlights mobile for its massive growth. âThe big thing is obviously going to be mobile. There are 5 billion people in the world who have phones, and a billion people using Facebookâ the social CEO said. âThere are actually already 600 million people using Facebook on phones, so thatâs growing really quickly. And as more phones become smartphones, itâs just this massive opportunity.â
Exactly how Facebook plans to take advantage of that opportunity, however, is unclear. Itâs not a new problem, either; worried whispers around Facebookâs mobile users not pulling their weight in terms of site income were circulating prior to the companyâs IPO, and Zuckerberg himself fingered the gap in strategy in interviews last week.
âThere are a lot of different bets that weâre making. A lot of it over the next few years is going to come down to mobile. There is this funnel that I think is pretty clear and in our favor, which is there are going to be more people using mobile devices. There are already 5 billion so thatâs where the user growth is going to come from. We already know that people who use Facebook on mobile use it more, spend more time on itâ Mark Zuckerberg
One possible area of development could be the overlap between commerce and mobile use. Research has already shown the growth of mobile devices among users comparing purchases, even if they still often return to their desktop in order to complete the transaction. Zuckerberg hints that thereâs potential in âwhat services can get built now that every company can assume they can get access to knowing who everyoneâs friends areâ and predicts âthereâs about to be a big push in commerce,â perhaps a lucrative one if Facebook can leverage its mobile users and take a cut from any shopping virtual spree they go on.
âOver the long term I also think weâre going to make more money per amount of time that people are spending on mobile, because it has this focus as a device. Itâs more like TV, where youâre doing one thing at a timeâ Zuckerberg concludes. âThe advertising and monetizing has to be integrated in, whereas on desktop we kind of reached this equilibrium where thereâs the content and then the ads off to the side of it. So Iâm really optimistic about that.â
The first step toward such integration is Facebook Gifts, allowing users to buy their friends real-world gifts even if they donât know their address, clothes size, or other personal preferences.
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