Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by carrotsarm 4600 days ago
Good Timing. No data to back what I'm saying, but I don't see FB going up any further. The time spent by me (almost none) and my other non-techie friends has decreased drastically on the website and I still don't see a very effective monetization strategy.
2 comments

They still have two billion dollar opportunities that they are sitting on:

1. An Adsense competitor 2. Video ads

These are not wild predictions of possible revenue streams. Facebook has already launched these features to select partners and when they are launched to the public, their stock will jump a lot more.

I am waiting for a good explanation as to why they haven't started an Adsense competitor yet; seems like it would be a goldmine
Facebook's game is to show that they can act on the grand old online media promise: that they first get loads of users, then later they can turn on the revenue streams and the cash comes pouring in.

Facebook is living up to this promise with the way they turned on mobile ads and they are now bringing in over a billion dollars annually. I think they want to maximize on that opportunity first, then turn on another revenue stream after mobile ad growth starts to slow. If they pull this off, they will be Wall Street darlings

The only explanation I've seen that makes any sense to me, is that their ad systems are still immature. They haven't figured out how to properly monetize their own platforms fully just yet, much less the rest of the Web.

Which also helps to explain why they get rated so poorly on return-on-investment when it comes to ad spending.

I'd say the last year has been a substantial break-through for Facebook in terms of pushing their ad systems forward and getting wide adoption of it (including finally getting mobile to spit dollars). Maybe a couple more years of developing their advertising platform and they'll get there.

I also think there's a general underestimation of how good the Google ad system is overall, and how hard it is to compete with.

For Google, AdSense solved the problem of limited inventory, i.e. there were just that many searches for "digital camera" and AdSense provided an opportunity to boost the inventory of potential ad venues to people who don't actively search.

What value would a third-party ad placement program provide to Facebook, who's already sitting on trillion+ ad displays per day, and has no shortage of inventory?

The issue I see with their ability to execute on those ideas though - I think facebook home's epic flop is a good indication of the quality of innovation to expect from FB going forward.
The issue with Home was that it was just too early to launch. They thought they could launch a beta product and get some feedback before iterating, but they severely underestimated users' needs for things like folders; which seems obvious in retrospect.

I think it will turn out to be a successful product as it evolves and integrates with more services.

I would say they still have a year or two's growth left if they don't come up with something new. Even though the growth is slowing down, I think they are improving the way they make money (more/better ads on Mobile for example). This would only result in better revenue and profits.