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Google totally blows away Facebook on ad performance

Studies from WordStream have shown that Facebook advertising have a lower click-turnout than Google advertising.
Business Insider | 22.05.2012
"No one ever got fired for telling clients to advertise on Facebook." That's the sarcastic mantra making its way round the digital advertising world right now. But is Facebook actually an efficient vehicle for marketers compared to the other digital ad giant, Google?

A comparison of the two companies from WordStream, a search marketing management company, suggests that Facebook is a much less effective ad medium than Google. (The caveat here is that WordStream is, obviously, rather more dependent on Google than Facebook as a medium.)

Facebook has less reach, and its individual ads are less effective, than old fashioned web advertising, according to WordStream's numbers, which it delivered—naturally—in the form of an infographic.

Most alarming for Facebook: The average click-through rate for an ad on the internet generally is just 0.1 percent. At Facebook, it's even lower: 0.051 percent. Google's CTR is 0.4 percent.
Here's a summary:
Total Reach

Facebook: 51% of all internet users
Google: 90% of all internet users

Q1 Revenues

Facebook: $1.06 billion, down 6.5 percent year on year and down 32 percent sequentially.
Google: $2.9 billion, up 1 percent year on year and up 0.7 percent sequentially.

Click through rates

Facebook: 0.051%
Google: 0.4%
Average: 0.1%
Targeting

Facebook:
Education
Workplace
Likes
Location
Demographics
Google:
Interest
Keywords
Remarketing
Location
Demographics
Formats

Facebook: standard display ad, Sponsored Stories
Google: Text ads, image ads, video text overlay ads, mobile web game ads

“So far, Facebook’s advertising platform hasn’t kept pace with the explosive growth of its social network, and it remains to be seen if CEO Mark Zuckerberg even wants to focus on advertising as a source of revenue. In his 2,500+ word letter to shareholders this month, he mentioned advertising just once,” said Larry Kim, Founder and CTO of WordStream.
About the author: Business Insider

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