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Facebook Is Quietly Ramping Up A Product That 'Kills Us,' Says Yahoo Source (FB, YHOO)
"There's a story brewing about a next very big business it's building—one that competes with one of Yahoo's flagship ad products and would kill us."
Yahoo is one of the biggest ad sellers on the Web, with $5 billion in annual revenue.
If a big portion of that money moved to Facebook, that'd be big news.
So we found out more.
It turns out what Facebook is doing is pretty simple, but powerful.
It has come up with a way to prove to marketers that there is a type of online advertising besides Google search ads that is worth spending large amounts of money on.
It's the result of a partnership with an upstart Nielsen competitor out of Denver called Datalogix. Facebook has been ramping it up over the past several weeks.
Here is how online brand advertising currently works:
A marketer puts a picture of their product and some eye-catching, memorable text about it on a bunch of Websites.
Here is how Facebook's new product works:
A marketer puts a picture of their product and some eye-catching, memorable text about it on Facebook (or, in the near future, sites that are partnering with Facebook).
Our source says this new Facebook product "closes the loop" on brand advertising in a way that no site besides Facebook is able.
This source gave three reasons Facebook can do this and no one else, including Yahoo, can: Scale, scale, and scale.
No one has more brand advertisers already on board than Facebook. (Yahoo and some others may have as many brands).
This source said that Yahoo has a similar product it offers advertisers, and that it generates revenues around $500 million. This source estimates that Facebook could do multiples of that.
Facebook knows it is onto something huge here. The best evidence?
Our source says the rumor is that Facebook has, as a part of its massive deal with Datalogix, secured the right to be notified should any suitors come by, looking to acquire.
Facebook formally launched a similar product along these lines for online retailers and direct marketers today.
Facebook declined to comment on this story.
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