Dennis Yu

Facebook and Omniture ink analytics and ad serving deal-- problems lie ahead

Read the MediaPost article, hot off the presses.  Omniture (now owned by Adobe) will have the ability to buy ads via SearchCenter, their PPC management tool, by the end of 2010.  That’s over 3 years behind Content Factory– an eternity in web advertising, so it will be interesting to see what product is in place by then.  I will want to know if Omniture has plans yet to integrate Facebook into SearchCenter such that it’s treated like another search engine or whether it operates orthogonally (since social media plays in the AID of the AIDA funnel).

It will be interesting to see how large agencies and brands adapt, given their penchant for wanting simple interfaces to manage campaigns, as opposed to performance marketing on Facebook.  The world of buying Facebook ads is significantly different than traditional keyword advertising– much closer to the content network, but still its own animal.

There is also the issue of attribution since social media adds additional touchpoints earlier in the funnel.  On Facebook, people find out about brands and develop trust from seeing what their friends like and endorse.  To be able to now see those social touchpoints later convert on Google search will pose an interesting challenge to advertisers that have to now allocate a budget between social and search.  This doesn’t even yet address the issue of brand bidding, which also messes up the perfect dream of automated bidding– to be able to hide behind the black box math that is actually just last-click attribution.

Even when Facebook does introduce its own conversion pixel later this year, it doesn’t address the issue of how to allocate credit when a user has multiple clicks in their clickstream prior to a conversion.  Neither the last click nor the first click nor the average click is the correct answer.

I believe in a multi-channel environment, the advertisers who rely upon having smart in-house strategists will win over those who decide to shell out cash to buy the most expensive software.  Online marketing, and marketing in general, is increasingly becoming multi-channel, which will scare some into hiding behind software while motivating others into arbitraging out the profits amidst the confusion.

We’ve been at this for 3 years with brands large and small, having seen and experienced the problems that the big players have yet to even encounter.  What do you think will happen?


Dennis Yu

Dennis Yu is co-author of the #1 best selling book on Amazon in social media, The Definitive Guide to TikTok Ads. He has spent a billion dollars on Facebook ads across his agencies and agencies he advises. Mr. Yu is the "million jobs" guy-- on a mission to create one million jobs via hands-on social media training, partnering with universities and professional organizations. You can find him quoted in major publications and on television such as CNN, the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, NPR, and LA Times. Clients have included Nike, Red Bull, the Golden State Warriors, Ashley Furniture, Quiznos-- down to local service businesses like real estate agents and dentists. He's spoken at over 750 conferences in 20 countries, having flown over 6 million miles in the last 30 years to train up young adults and business owners. He speaks for free as long as the organization believes in the job-creation mission and covers business class travel. You can find him hiking tall mountains, eating chicken wings, and taking Kaqun oxygen baths-- likely in a city near you.

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