The Coming Facebook Gold Rush

by Sam on December 29, 2009

I recently discovered an awesome new blog – For Entrepreneurs, written by David Skok at Matrix Partners. One of the best posts I have read in some time is David’s post titled, Startup Killer: The Cost of Customer Acquisition.

The (in)ability to acquire customers is something I have personal experience with and have resolved to maniacally focus on in future endeavors.

Lately I have become fascinated with Facebook as a platform for startup development (and go-to-market strategies) precisely for the reasons outlined by David. IMO Facebook (in its current iteration) offers the cheapest and most efficient way to acquire customers, anywhere.

Much has been written recently about the increasing importance of Facebook Fan Pages. However, a recent post on Alley Insider made me consider Fan Pages in a new light: think of them as “landing pages 2.0.”

As a developer and entrepreneur, one is always thinking of new ways to increase “conversions” i.e., when someone lands on your website, how do you maximize the likelihood they will fill in your form fields and sign-up? What steps can be taken to reduce transactional friction? Getting someone to convert on the web is a difficult process; average web conversion rates are only around 1%!

Now consider Facebook Fan Pages.

You see the phrase “Become a Fan!” for a favorite brand, non-profit or cool sounding new service either as an advertisement within Facebook, or as a button somewhere on the web. You click “Become a Fan!” once. Bingo! Conversion!

Effectively what has happened is that Facebook has reduced landing page friction to almost zero. Not only that, but Facebook has even vetted user identity for you – it’s a real-person behind that conversion. Even more amazing is this new ‘single-click conversion’ gives you more access to data on that individual than even the best profile form template you could find, or create. Couple all this with the ability to reverse engineer targeting of Pages through Facebook’s own ad and feed environments and you are talking about the ULTIMATE customer acquisition tool.

This line of thinking leads me to wonder why well known, awesome VCs like Matrix are not (more) actively investing in Facebook-centric businesses and applications? Of course, a business should not be solely reliant on Facebook. In fact, many companies like Slide.com are now trying to move out of the FB platform shadow, but nevertheless, a good business should be able to use a platform to initially capture customers while scaling a business model capable of standing on its own.

The way I see it, customer acquisition on Facebook is a coming gold rush in 2010 for sharp entrepreneurs.

Note: If you don’t subscribe to David’s For Entrepreneurs, you can do so here.

Update: I’d missed this, but great thoughts here by Nick O’Neil on Facebook Pages as next-generation landing pages.

  • Sam, I do think that you are right about this. The question really is how many of these apps/games will have staying power, and also have the ability to monetize.

    There is a very cool tool that I just came across from a blog visitor, called Kontagent that you might want to take a look at.

    If you do come across Facebook apps that are doing well, and look they can build staying power, and monetize, I would love to hear about them.
  • Thanks David.

    I am working on something and am using this blog to touch on the underpinnings of my thesis.

    Happy to share what we're up to and will let you know if I hear of anything else worth exploring. I know Kontagent, but don't see much value. The company to watch in this space is KissMetrics.
  • alai2001
    Hey Sam,
    Curious as to what aspect of what you're doing where Kontagent lacks value compared to your experiences with KissMetrics.

    The founders of KissMetrics are friends of ours, and we have tremendous respect for what they are good at.

    That said, this is interesting to me as we're one of the very few (if not the only) folks in the space that has gone deep into the social analytics world (analytics = instrumentation +optimization) -- with a complete A/B testing and viral track/optimization framework.

    I'd welcome the opportunity to chat about what we might be able to improve for your needs, and share with you some of the things we have in the immediate pipeline that may very well change your mind.

    Thanks,
    Albert Lai
    co-founder
    Kontagent
  • Hey Albert!

    I would love that. I didn't mean anything negative by my comments and would love to better understand how we can benefit from Kontagent. My initial impressions are often wrong.

    Happy to chat...I'm sam dot huleatt at gmail dot com
  • Sam, would love to hear what you are up to when you feel the time is right. Thanks for the advice on Kontagent versus KissMetrics.
  • deadhedge
    Interestingly, I just had an experience with a focus group that we put together where I saw the impending death of Facebook. It was a health care focus group and they were talking about how they have so little faith in Facebook's privacy policies that they would never put any meaningful information on Facebook anymore nor seek out any relationship via Facebook with someone that they do not know.

    Granted this is healthcare not consumer goods or something like that. However, I saw the issues (real or perceived) that Facebook has dealt with around user concern for privacy as its potential downfall. If users no longer trust Facebook with information, they will not share nor trust any third party who tries to access them via Facebook.
  • I disagree. Yes, Fan pages are an easy target to attract users, and the "become a fan" is such effortless action.... that it has no value. Not only that, but you don't actually have their information. You can't sell them anything. They're not a user of your site, per se. In fact, Fan pages have unfortunately become so spammy that Facebook is reducing the visibility of Fan Page updates to the users. I fear that Facebook will continue to be a black hole/walled garden of user attention and content.
  • Mr. Band! I'm not sure what specific point of mine you are disagreeing with. If you can name be a cheaper or more efficient way to harvest users than Facebook, I am all ears. Yes, a Fan is not a paying customer but a combination of Facebook Connect and developing within the Facebook framework is a gold mine for customer acquisition. I stand by that and will bet you a Chipotle burrito with Skeevis Arts Hot Sauce that I am right :)
  • jpmarcum
    Hey Sam - you're right. We just did some test FB marketing for KidMango.com (our site/service that aggregates cartoon libraries). The fan conversion against FB users who had declared on their profiles that they liked some of our mid-tail properties ( e.g. Care Bears and Carmen Sandiego) was so good I'm not sure I should even be mentioning it. It remains to be seen if there's a positive ROI as we need a little more time to get a full LTV but I'm pretty optimistic at this point.
  • Hey JP! Yep, I debated publishing this because it is definitely is true and still somewhat of a secret. I find it funny that I write a post with "Lady Gaga" in the title and it gets a sh*t ton of traffic, then follow-up with one of the more valuable insights I think I have -- and hardly anyone reads it! Oh, well :)
  • jpmarcum
    What? There was a Lady Gaga post? Why I am reading this crap!?! ;-)
  • Exactly.
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