Brands that conduct Facebook marketing can gain huge benefits by targeting the friends of their Facebook fans, according to a new report by comScore and Facebook, which also found that Facebook users spend 27% of their time browsing homepage newsfeeds.

Below, additional findings from the report, titled "The Power of Like: How Brands Reach and Influence Fans Through Social Media Marketing," by comScore Social Essentials and Facebook.

A Company of Friends

Friends of fans* constitute a large percentage of Facebook's universe. For example, Microsoft Bing's fan base is approximately 1.7 million, but that number pales in comparison with the number of friends of fans in the network: 232 million—more than 130 times the size of its fan base:

 

Friends of fans typically comprise a bigger segment of consumers—34 times larger, on average, for the top 100 brand pages—and can receive social media brand impressions via their friends (i.e., for every fan of a top 100 brand, an additional 34 friends of fans can be reached via an exposure to the fan).

Extending Brand Reach via Friends of Fans

Looking specifically at Starbucks, Southwest, and Bing, the number of friends of fans reached by those brand impressions exceeds the reach of fans alone—by nearly double for Starbucks and Bing, and roughly 25% in the case of Southwest.

Importance of Newsfeed

Facebook users spent more than one-quarter of their time on the site consuming and interacting with the Facebook newsfeed (appearing on users' homepages) in May 2011. That activity accounted for 4% of all time spent online in the US during the period.

Profile viewing accounted for 21% on time spent on the site, followed by photo viewing (17%) and use of apps and tools (10%).


Looking for real, hard data that can help you match social media tools and tactics to your marketing goals? The State of Social Media Marketing, a 240-page original research report from MarketingProfs, gives you the inside scoop on how 5,140 marketing pros are using social media to create winning campaigns, measure ROI, and reach audiences in new and exciting ways.


As the primary location where branded content is consumed, users are 40-150 times more likely to consume branded content in newsfeed than to visit a fan page itself.

To grasp that difference in consumption of branded content in the newsfeed vs. the brand page, the study compared page views on fan pages to the total number of brand exposures on Facebook.

Among the three brands studied, Starbucks garnered the most reach via earned brand impressions, delivering 156 brand impressions throughout Facebook for every one page view on its fan page. Southwest delivered 42 brand impressions for every fan page view, while Bing delivered 45.

Such outsized ratios, though surprising, are actually consistent with how people use Facebook, the study notes. Most users' time is spent on the newsfeed over individual profile pages; the branded content impressions reflect that reality.

Despite the dominance of consumption in the newsfeed relative to the brand page, a minority of fans view content from a brand in a given week: On average, 16% of Fans are reached by branded content in a given week (five out of seven days), according to Facebook analysis, likely because some fans miss content if they are not logged onto the site during periods when brands are active.

*A note on definitions: The "fan" user segment consists of users who have affirmatively stated their affinity for a particular brand by "liking" that brand. The "friends of fans" user segment (aka "friends") is defined as those who are not explicitly brand fans but who are exposed to brand impressions via a friend who is a fan of a particular brand.  "Non-Fans" are users of the social network who have neither become a fan of a particular brand, nor are connected to a fan.

About the report: Data was collected and analyzed using the comScore Social Essentials product, a measurement service based on comScore's proprietary global panel of 2 million Internet users from a home or work computers. Mobile-based Internet browsing is not included in this analysis. Certain select data points and illustrations in the paper are based on aggregate, non-personally-identifiable data sourced from Facebook.


Enter your email address to continue reading

Facebook: Brands Should Target Friends of Fans

Don't worry...it's free!

Already a member? Sign in now.

Sign in with your preferred account, below.

Did you like this article?
Know someone who would enjoy it too? Share with your friends, free of charge, no sign up required! Simply share this link, and they will get instant access…
  • Copy Link

  • Email

  • Twitter

  • Facebook

  • Pinterest

  • Linkedin