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Facebook Considers nonEnglish Sites

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Title: Facebook Considers nonEnglish Sites


1
Facebook Considers non-English Sites
  • Published September 30, 2007 in the Financial
    Times, by Kevin Allison Aline van Duyn
  • Presented by Michele Motley, Alan Friedlander,
    Brant Lang

2
History of Facebook
  • Started by Harvard student Mark Zuckerberg.
  • Began as a hobby to connect with students
    throughout the dorms.
  • Launched nation wide in February of 2004.
  • Second largest online social network following
    MySpace.
  • Primary focus of high school and college
    students.
  • Unlike its competitors it is not available to
    everyone only students.
  • Recognizes students from over 30,000 institutions
    all over the world.
  • 7th most trafficked site in the US.

3
Uses of Facebook
  • People can stay in touch with friends at other
    universities
  • Send photos
  • Lets people know about events taking place
  • Able to join groups to find people with your same
    interests

4
How Does Facebook Make Money?
  • Low operating expenses
  • selling ads through a small sales force
  • Their traffic and demographic allows them to sell
    their inventory easily because high school and
    college students represent a highly sought
    demographic.

5
History of MySpace
  • Started in 2003 by eUniverses Chris DeWolfe and
    Tom Anderson
  • First MySpace members were eUniverse employees
  • By December 2004 MySpace is the most visited
    online social network
  • In July 2005 eUniverse and MySpace are purchased
    by News Corp. 580 million
  • By 2007 MySpace reaches 200 million accounts
  • Currently used in over 60 countries and available
    in 7 languages

6
How does MySpace make money?
  • Banner ads
  • Sponsored searches
  • Entertainment promotion
  • In 2006 Google signed a 900 deal to provide
    search and advertising features on MySpace

7
Article Summary
  • Facebook is preparing for an ambitious overseas
    expansion due to its explosive growth in the past
    year.
  • Mark Zuckerberg, Facebooks founder and chief
    executive is attempting to broaden the sites
    reach beyond its core audience of US users.
  • International growth is one of a few things that
    we are very focused on right now
  • Currently Facebook has overtaken MySpace as the
    most popular social networking site in other
    English-speaking countries, including Canada and
    the UK.
  • MySpace has already introduced non-English
    language sites, and has introduced local features
    for MySpace in many non-US markets.

8
Marketing Implications
  • Facebook can use a global marketing strategy of
    localization.
  • This would adapt the website according to country
    or region by changing the language, features,
    etc.
  • When creating non-English speaking sites,
    Facebook will expand their advertising market.
  • Example Companies in Japan , who had no need to
    advertise on Facebook before, will be more
    willing to buy ad space for their products
    because it will now reach Japanese consumers.
  • Companies such as Microsoft, Yahoo!, and Viacom
    have all made large offers to buy out Facebook,
    which if bought, would bring the website to
    another level.

9
Implications Continued
  • Facebook creator Marc Zuckerberg has stated his
    desire to keep the site independent, but with a
    powerful company behind the helm, Facebook would
    have a better chance of surviving the global
    market.
  • Zuckerberg has explained that Facebook has to go
    beyond internationalization and figure out the
    cultural implications of moving into markets like
    Europe, China, Japan
  • In other words, how would a Facebook website
    affect another countries culture?
  • It could do the same as it does in the US, which
    brings people together from all over the nation
    that share common interests, and activities.
  • Would they have to adapt features to each
    country? Such as poking another Facebook
    member. This could be interpreted wrong in
    different countries.

10
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