Until natural language processing improves, only humans can tell
what’s important. So Facebook today starts rolling out the option to pay
to promote a friend’s posts
and get them seen by more people. This will help critical posts bubble
to the top of the feed, and let Facebook earn some money, too. The
feature respects privacy controls, but could still make you look like a
self-important prick.
Facebook began testing the ability to promote your own posts in May 2012 and rolled the feature out
to the U.S. in October. See, your average Facebook post only gets seen
by about 16 percent of your friends because they aren’t online soon
after you post, or you never interact with them on Facebook. Promoted
Posts artificially boost your posts so they appear in the news feed to
people Facebook wouldn’t have shown them to.
The option has enraged some people, making them feel like they’re
being extorted to communicate with their friends. When it first came
out, I said Facebook was recklessly endangering the meritocracy of the
news feed, which until then only rewarded posts that got the most Likes,
comments, shares, and clicks.
But there are real uses for Promoted Posts. If you’re raising money
for a good cause, looking for an apartment, or have a big announcement
for your company, paying to force it into more people’s news feeds can
actually be really valuable, and worth the $7 or so. The price varies by
geographic area and how many people it could reach.
Now
you can do the same for friends’ posts, or at least you’ll be able to
soon. A gradual global roll-out for the feature is starting now, and
it’s only available to people with fewer than 5,000 total friends and
subscribers.
When you see one you think deserves more attention, you can click the
drop-down arrow next to a post to sponsor it, and it will reach a
larger percentage of the original audience of the post. That means
promoting a friend’s post won’t violate their privacy settings. If the
post was set to only show up for their friends, your payment will just
make it show up to more of their friends. If their post is publicly visible, your promotion could appear to your friends, too.
Facebook explains “If your friend is running a marathon for charity
and has posted that information publicly, you can help that friend by
promoting their post to all of your friends. Or if your friend is
renting their apartment out and she tells her friends on Facebook, you
can share the post with the people you and your friend have in common so
that it shows up higher in the news feed and more people notice it.”
One issue, though, is that you don’t need a friend’s permission to
promote their posts. And depending on what they said, the extra eyeballs
might not always be appreciated.
A friend could jokingly promote an embarrassing photo of me, or my
status about something bad happening to me. If I post that I wrote an
article or am selling something, a friend might innocently think they’re
helping by promoting the update. But when people see the “promoted” tag
on my self-serving post and realize money was traded for their
attention, they might think I’m tooting my own horn a little too loudly.
Facebook will have to keep an eye on this one. If people use it for
evil, or people unwittingly end up looking like a loudmouth used car
salesmen in cheap plaid polyester suits that reek of even cheaper
cologne, then it may want to give authors the option to prevent
promotions.
Original Source : http://techcrunch.com/2013/02/14/promoted-posts-friends/
Now You Can Pay To Promote Your Friends’ Facebook Posts To More People, Even Without Their Permission
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment