Facebook first revealed the broadstrokes of its master-plan to make money from its chat product, Messenger, during its last earnings call.
CEO
Mark Zuckerberg said that the company planned to let people and
businesses start messaging each other ad-free. Then, once it became
natural for both people and businesses to communicate that way, Facebook
would start finding ways to squeeze money from the businesses.
Today, on stage at TechCrunch Disrupt,
ad exec Andrew Bosworth pulled back the curtain a bit further,
revealing that Facebook is working on a new ad-type called "Click to
message" ads.
The idea is that businesses would design ads about
their company or product, and then Facebook would place a little
"Message" button at the bottom. If a person saw the ad and then felt
compelled to click the message button and send the business a question
or comment, then the business would pay for that ad click.
Viola! Facebook would be using these ads to make money from the usage of Messenger.
"It's a huge part of our larger strategy around Pages and 'call to actions,'" Bosworth said.
No more websites (or phone calls)
Earlier this month
Facebook completely overhauled its Pages product for small businesses,
adding new call-to-action buttons that will let businesses encourage
potential customers to book appointments or browse products. It also
made it possible for all businesses to use the Messaging tools.
Facebook says it wants businesses to start thinking of their Pages as an alternative to creating designated websites.
"We
want Pages to be the most viable online presence for businesses,"
Bosworth said, noting that unique visits to Pages are up 40%
year-over-year, and that in the last month alone Pages have seen one
billion monthly active unique visits.
Similarly, he noted that
Facebook has noticed more phone-call fatigue than ever: People would
rather get their questions answered via a quick text exchange than by
picking up the phone.
"If Pages can trigger real business
outcomes for people, that's a huge opportunity," he says. "Click to
message" ads might be a big way to make that happen. Bosworth says that
people use messaging with businesses to ask questions about products or
look into reservations.
Although Facebook hasn't rolled out this
new "click to message" ad format yet (it's in the testing phase),
Bosworth remains optimistic:
"We think they could be really popular."
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