Big Profit at Facebook as It Tilts to Mobile
by Vindu Goel
SAN FRANCISCO — Ten years after its founding as a simple website for a few thousand Harvard undergraduates to manage their social lives, Facebook is a far different company.
SAN FRANCISCO — Ten years after its founding as a simple website for a few thousand Harvard undergraduates to manage their social lives, Facebook is a far different company.
About
757 million people around the world used the social network on an
average day last month, and three-quarters of them logged on using
mobile devices.
Facebook said that mobile advertising generated more than half of the company's revenue in the last quarter. |
Facebook’s
business has also been transformed. In 2012, most of its money came
from generic banner ads delivered to users visiting its site by desktop
computer. In the fourth quarter of 2013, 53 percent of the company’s
advertising revenue came from pitches delivered to iPads, smartphones
and other mobile devices, with many of those ads highly targeted by
gender, age and other demographics.
“I
think it’s inarguable that Facebook is a mobile-first company,”
Facebook’s chief financial officer, David Ebersman, said in an
interview.
The
ascendance of mobile, both in use of the site and advertising, was
apparent in Facebook’s strong fourth-quarter financial results, which
the company reported on Wednesday.
Facebook
had total revenue of $2.59 billion in the quarter that ended Dec. 31,
up from $1.59 billion in the same quarter a year ago. Revenue from
advertising was $2.34 billion, up 76 percent from the previous year.
Net
income was $523 million, or 20 cents a share, in the quarter, compared
with $64 million, or 3 cents a share, in the previous year’s fourth
quarter, when heavy stock compensation costs related to Facebook’s
initial public offering depressed results. Using a measure that excludes
those compensation costs, profits were up 83 percent.
Facebook's stock activity over the last three months. |
“It’s
hard to see any flaws in this quarter,” said Ron Josey, an analyst at
JMP Securities. “They’re seeing demand for their ad product go through
the roof.”
Mr.
Ebersman told investors in a conference call that despite selling 8
percent fewer ads, the average effective price for a Facebook ad was up
92 percent compared with the previous year.
Shares
of the company surged on the results, which were significantly better
than Wall Street had expected. The stock, which closed down about 3
percent in regular trading before the earnings were released, rose as
much as 10 percent in after-hours trading.
Given
that Facebook had virtually no mobile presence in 2012, the transition
is a huge turn that now puts the company at the forefront of the
industry’s shift to serving people on the move.
The
company deserves much of the credit for making that switch, said Nate
Elliott, an industry analyst at Forrester Research. It revamped its
once-clunky mobile apps and introduced better targeting.
But
he said the company’s principal ad format — messages inserted among the
stream of status updates and photos that users share with one another —
became mobile largely because that was how users chose to reach their
news feeds.
“Their users changed their behavior,” he said. “That was pretty much a stroke of luck.”
Facebook continued to expand its user base, with about 1.23 billion people logging on to the service at least once a month.
But there remain worries that younger people are abandoning Facebook for instant-messaging service likes Snapchat. In October, the company warned that younger teenagers were engaging less with the service. On Wednesday, executives pointedly declined to discuss whether that trend has continued.
“They
must know by refusing to answer the question, they are increasing the
urgency with which that question will be asked,” Mr. Elliott said.
In
an interview, Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operating officer, said
that the company had “the best mobile app out there” and garnered about
one out of every five minutes that mobile users were online.
Sheryl Sandberg of Facebook said the site had refined its ad targeting so that marketers could reach certain demographics. |
She
said the company had also been able to demonstrate to advertisers that
buying ads on Facebook was effective. “Our investments in being able to
prove results to marketers have really paid off,” she said.
The
company has refined its ad targeting so that marketers can reach the
demographics they most precisely want to hit, while also simplifying the
options for smaller businesses, she said.
Facebook
accounted for more than 18.4 percent of worldwide mobile ad spending in
2013, according to the research firm eMarketer, up from 5.4 percent in
2012. Google still commands the greatest presence in mobile ads,
primarily through search, with 53.2 percent of the market.
Mark
Zuckerberg, Facebook’s co-founder and chief executive, said on the
investor call that the company still had a lot of growth ahead.
Despite more than one billion users, “we’re still a small part of the world’s population,” he said.
And
Facebook has grand plans to make ads more relevant and to help users
better sift through the more than one trillion pieces of information
that have been shared so far. “We’re really early in the game on this,”
Mr. Zuckerberg said. — New York Times
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