Facebook, a company grew up from a small network
site to a $50 billion company, gets almost all the revenue from advertising.
The only things Facebook has are the hundreds millions accounts. Because of the
large database of customers, Facebook have so many valuable details information
for advertising, which make Facebook earn a lot. Also, Facebook help people
connect each other easily. However, this may not be good for Facebook user
because Facebook grab users information with or without users’ allowance, and
these may against users. Facebook wants users share more information so that
they can earn more money from advertising. There are no laws says social
networks like Facebook should show the users what do the network companies do.
Facebook was founded by 2004 by Harvard student Mark
Zuckerberg and originally called thefacebook. It was quickly successful on
campus and expanded beyond Harvard into other Ivy League schools. With the
phenomenon growing in popularity, Zuckerberg enlisted two other students,
Duston Moskovitz and Chris Hughes, to assist. Within months, thefacebook became
a nationwide college networking website. Zuckerberg and Moskovitz left Harvard
to run thefacebook full time shortly after taking the site national. In August
of 2005, thefacebook was renamed Facebook, and the domain was purchased for a
reported $200,000 US Dollars (USD). At that time, it was only available to
schools, universities, organizations, and companies within English speaking
countries, but has since expanded to include anyone. Facebook becomes more responsible about
the data collection process. Then Facebook invites scrutiny to deal with these
issues.
In August 2012, Facebook was charged with cheating
users that they told users they would keep their private information, but they
made public. Facebook agree to ask users before they change user’s privacy
preferences, and they should submit privacy audits. In American, it is hard that
users get data that Facebook collect from them, but in other countries, like
Australia and Ireland, the stringent law allow users access more data on
Facebook. There is another database, which has more than 60 billion photos in
Facebook. This also makes big benefit from advertising. In 2012, Facebook allow
users control and see their actions on advertisements.
SWOT ANALISYS
STRENGTHS:
- Facebook just recently eclipsed the 1 billion users mark, and the number of users Facebook possesses has grown explosively since its creation, as the chart below displays.
- One in seven people in the world are on Facebook, however that is only 14.29% of the total population so the company still has room to grow.
- In 2011, Facebook was the most visited website and most searched term on the internet.
- Near absolute monopoly in the social network sector.
- Momentous Barrier to Entry: Facebook has a distinguished and highly recognized brand, and for any competitor to even come close to matching Facebook would take a huge amount of money and time.
- Brand Loyalty: People using Facebook are locked into the ecosystem, all their friends are on Facebook, and they are very unlikely to change as it would be a huge undertaking.
- It can be used for marketing, advertising, recruitment & brand enhancement.
- Enormous and permanent data about all its users. Even if Facebook goes bankrupt tomorrow, it will still own all the user data and be able to sell it.
- Enormous and permanent data about all its users. Even if Facebook goes bankrupt tomorrow, it will still own all the user data and be able to sell it.
- The ability and interface to Connect with applications such as Travelocity, Digg etc., All this enables Facebook to gain more insight about the user and hence has more data which it can sell.
- Constant innovation of the site and its offerings.
WEAKNESSES
- Users are growing more concerned about privacy violation. It’s hard for Facebook to draw a line between providing great features to users and encroaching their privacy.
- Facebook is having a hard time monetizing its business beyond advertising. They have tried several ways of selling their users’ data, but since user’s value privacy on the site, there is the danger that selling users’ data will cause users to share less information or exit Facebook altogether.
- They went from zero to hero very quickly, they can go back to zero just as quickly.
- Before Facebook, MySpace was the premier social network, nothing is stopping anyone from inventing a bigger and better version.
- The company has no dividend, and has expressed no plans to begin paying out dividends in the future.
OPPORTUNITIES
- The opportunity in the mobile sector is immense, as COO Sheryl Sandberg put it, “Mobile is a great opportunity to grow our users, to grow engagement and to grow monetization, and we’re at a very early stage.”
- Just in the past quarter ads brought to people on mobile devices produced $150 million, 14% of total advertising revenue, up from just $10 million in the second quarter.
- Because of the plethora of information Facebook receives from each member, it can send advertisements that are more likely to interest that specific person, and therefore they can charge more for ads than other companies.
- Facebook’s platform is engrossing and users usually spend a lot of time on the website, allowing Facebook to again charge more for advertisements, in the last quarter advertisement prices rose 7%.
- While it very unlikely with their huge valuation and Zuckerberg’s attitude regarding getting acquired, Apple may find that acquiring Facebook and integrating it into their ecosystem could be beneficial and profitable, again not probable, but Apple has the cash required.
THREATS
- Major publically-traded competitors of Facebook include Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) and LinkedI (NYSE: LNKD).
- Google is a much larger and more diversified company, however they recently released a social network, Google+, to get their feet into the market.
- LinkedIn also is an operator of a social network, however theirs is more focused on the business man or women as a device to link them to potential customers or employers, and unlike Facebook, LinkedIn offers a premium service which they charge for.
QUESTION
QUESTION 1 : Perform an
ethical analysis of Facebook. What is the ethical dilemma presentedby this
case?
Facebook Ethical Dilemma
Facebook faces
controversy over the handling and usage of the extensive information it
collects from its users. FB user’s biggest concerns are the privacy and user
controls over the information granted to Facebook. Facebook faces the dilemma
of how to gain revenues from user information without violating their privacy. The
management and organization failed to consider its users privacy concern when
it introduced new software that users felt to be invasive. Facebook provides a
free service that users pay for, in effect, by providing details about their
lives, friendships, interests and activities.
Facebook, in turn, uses that trove of
information to attract advertisers, app makers and other business opportunities.
Facebook occasionally isn't enforcing its own rules on data privacy. Facebook
requires apps to ask permission before accessing a user's personal details.
However, a user's friends aren't notified if information about them is used by
a friend's app. Facebook provides people a specific social networking platform
and facilitates contents sharing and communication. It targets global netizens,
advertisers, and also application developers. Facebook partners with different
parties in the functionality, application developing, and advertisers for
enabling various features to meet users’ different social needs. To give better
services to right customers, Facebook exploits and analyzes customer
information, shares info with third party and provides ads to targeted ones. It
meanwhile gives users control on privacy setting, enables a safe and trusted
internet environment, which maintains a good relationship with customers.
QUESTION 2 : What is the relationship
of privacy to Facebook's business model?
Talking privacy to
Facebook is a bit ironic. Facebook’s entire business model is based on
aggregation and sharing user information. They give people a free social media
platform to use and in turn sell advertising and insights based on what they
learn about user. Facebook has massive capabilities to collect, store and
analyze data. This allows Facebook to sell very targeted advertising.
Therefore, privacy is the Facebook business model.
Facebook states its
regulations concerning to the rights and responsibilities derive from the
Facebook Principles, and govern the relationship with users and others who
interact with Facebook. The relevant statements include Privacy Policy, Payment
Terms, Platform Policies, Ads Guidelines, Promotion Guidelines, Claims of Intellectual
Property Infringement, Claims of Copyright Infringement, etc. All Facebook
parties must comply with this policies.
1. Individual Privacy
Privacy is defined as the
state of being private or the condition of being concealed or hidden. In terms
of Facebook, the privacy of the individual is how much information, personal or
not is seen but other users than the creator or provider of that information.
Facebook share information about the user over the internet, where it can be
freely accessed by anyone. This is where issues of privacy to the individual
arise.
2. Security of Data & Information
The security of data and
information refers to how private the information on a Facebook page can be and
if it can be accessed by others and the extent they can edit the information on
that page.
3. Accuracy of Data & Information
With the internet being a
free environment, there are no set rules about who you can be or act as whilst
on it.
4. Data Quality
Data quality refers to
the level of trustworthiness that information is susceptible to. For example
data quality affects the large amount of games and applications on Facebook,
where the level of trust for the game or application is not known. For all the
user could know it may be misleading and result in identity theft or fraud
through the use of the user’s information.
5. Changing Nature of Business
Businesses shifting in
the way they operate as they have now come to embrace technology such as the
internet and are embracing its advances and innovations. Social networking
sites such as Facebook which see more than 350 million people using the site proves
to businesses that this can be seen as a great opportunity for marketing over
the internet through ads to be displayed on Facebook. This hence changes the
way market advertisers work, having to also adapt to using the internet as
their tool.
6. Appropriate Information Use
Appropriate information
use refers to the correct usage of information and the adherence to privacy
policy if any. Appropriate use of information on Facebook can refer to
applications accessing the user’s information and correctly using it without
distributing it to any external sources or companies.
7. Health & Safety
Health and safety on the
internet applies to the mental health of an individual rather than the
physical. For example the use of social networking site Facebook is associated
with issues of cyber bullying and peer pressure.
8. Copyright Laws
Copyright laws on
Facebook refer to the copying of original pieces of music or art, just as
MySpace music works, where bands can post their tracks and pieces online,
arises the issue of copyright and how much of the available information can be
reproduced. Although this wouldn’t really apply to Facebook itself but rather
the user who posted the information on a Facebook page.
9. Advertising Policies
Facebook's policies
restrict app makers from using any ad companies that haven't signed an
agreement with Facebook—an agreement that prevents the advertiser from
collecting personal information. However some apps are also letting unapproved
advertising companies track users, according to data collected from Privacy
Choice, a start-up that offers privacy services. This could be a violation of
Facebook's advertising policies.
10. Advanced privacy models
Facebook is considered to
have one of the most advanced privacy models for its apps because it lists
nearly every type of data sought—and provides users with the ability to reject
apps' requests for some types of data. Smartphone apps often lack privacy
policies and don't offer as much information and control over their use of
personal data.
QUESTION 3 : Describe the weaknesses
of Facebook’s privacy policies and features. What management, organization, and
technology factors have contributed to those weaknesses?
Three highlights on Facebook’s privacy policies
1.
User decides how much information they feel
comfortable sharing on FB and user control how it is distributed through their
privacy settings.
2.
FB is also a service for sharing information on FB
enhanced applications and websites. User can control how they share information
with those third party applications and websites through their application
settings.
3.
FB allow advertisers to select characteristic of
users they want to show their advertisement to and FB use the information users
share with FB to serve those advertisements.
Describe the weaknesses of Facebook’s privacy policies and features.
1.
Allowing user’s information to be shared and made
public. Continued to let other users know what you were doing until disabled it
manually.
2.
The incorporation and handling of its news feed
feature. The news feed feature provided other users that you are friends with
updates of actions that you performed while logged into FB.
3.
Unable to delete FB account or any of the information
that is on user account. FB keeps a copy of user entire account even after they
deactivate it and no longer wish to have any affiliation with FB.
4.
FB’s privacy policy is difficult to comprehend.
Users normally don’t quite understand the options on Privacy Setting. Facebook
states its regulations concerning to the rights and responsibilities derive
from the Facebook Principles, and govern the relationship with users and others
who interact with Facebook. The relevant statements include Privacy Policy,
Payment Terms, Platform Policies, Ads Guidelines, etc. All Facebook parties
must comply with this policy. The company has encountered more than its fair
share of controversy along its path to success, mostly concerning its handling
and usage of the extensive information it collects from its users.
What management, organization, and technology factors have contributed
to those weaknesses?
Management:
·
Facebook assumed it had the consent of users to
share information about them that it collected through the Beacon advertising
service if they did not use the opt-out feature. Facebook changed Beacon to be
an “opt-in” service and gave users the ability to disable it completely.
·
The company utterly failed to grasp the extent to
which the service violated its users’ privacy as well as the uproar such a
service was likely to cause. The same thing occurred when Facebook introduced
its News Feed feature.
·
Generally, it is a strategic management of FB’s to
get its user to share as much data as possible so that FB can serve relevant
advertisement to users. This is because FB revenue comes almost entirely from
advertising.
Organization:
·
The personal information collected on the site
represents a mother load to advertisers, but one that will remain largely
untapped if Facebook users do not feel comfortable enough or have sufficient
incentive to share it.
·
Users that attempted to delete their accounts were
met with resistance and often required outside assistance from watchdog groups.
·
FB wants the world to be more open and connected,
because it stands to make more money. However, the privacy controls over the
personal data is far from what FB currently offers. Moreover, most of users are
not really aware of the privacy setting in their FB’s account.
Technology:
·
Privacy and user controls over the information
granted to Facebook are the biggest concerns most users have with the site.
Facebook grossly miscalculated user privacy demands when it launched the
company’s Beacon advertising service because it shared information about users
that they had not explicitly intended or agreed to share.
·
The service originally began as an “opt-out”
feature. Even after users opted-out, the service continued to send information
to Facebook regardless of whether or not the user was logged into Facebook at
the time. The company’s servers maintain copies of information indefinitely in
accounts that have been deactivated.
·
A FB user’s friends are not notified if information
about them is collected by that user’s application. Many of FB’s features and
services are enabled by default when they are launched without notifying users.
QUESTION 4 : Will facebook be able to
have a successful business model without invading privacy? Explain your answer.
Are there any measures Facebook could take to make this possible?
No, we don’t think that
FB will be able to have a successful business model without invading privacy. Facebook currently is serving as much to advertise
and reach people as it earns from those advertisements. There are no fees that are to be paid to join FB or
for its use, it all seems like they threw in a few advertisements and hoped
that its exposure would bring in consumers. Obviously, the backbone of FB’s business model is
advertisement. As a result, FB needs more users data to customized its ads and
indirectly invading individual privacy.
·
It is a critical challenge for FB to avoid offends user’s
privacy.
Positive indicators:
1.
It’s one of the largest social networking sites in
the world and is growing.
2. Facebook’s interface is simplistic and clean and
tends to attract those looking for a crisp, more structured social networking
environment.
3. It represents a unique opportunity for advertisers
to reach highly targeted audiences based on their demographic information and
narrowly specified criteria.
4. It represents a gold mine of opportunity because of
the information the site has gathered and because of the richness of the social
networking environment.
5. Part of its status as a first-mover in the social
networking marketplace helps attract more users
Negative indicators:
1.
It has created large numbers of hostile users
because of its privacy violations
2. Facebook’s own popularity will injure its chances to
attract advertisers to its site, claiming that the engaging and immersive
environment that draws visitors to the site makes users less likely to click on
ads.
3. Skeptics also believe that the current application
system, where applications tend to support one another via advertising through
other applications without the aid of extensive outside advertising, is an
unsustainable model over the long term. So far, only 200 Facebook applications
have attracted more than 10,000 users per day and 60 percent failed to attract
even 100 daily users.
4.
It remains to be seen whether or not the company can
turn its heavy site traffic and trove of personal information into new revenue
streams.
Are there any measures Facebook could take to make this possible?
·
To alert all the members of FB with an electronic
detailed letter stating that for advertising purpose information that is
submitted to your information pages will be used by Fb company.
·
To give the users the options to either accepts or
reject this offer in order to install a legal standing that with the users of
the site as well as protect the integrity of the company.
Every business owner wants to get maximum return on investment when it comes to market the brand but it is also a truth that online marketing has become really difficult because of the competition so you have to be careful about the marketing methods that you pick. For me, facebook ads services are providing really good ROI.
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