Facebook advertising: Quality over quantity So Facebook makes an algorithmic change, the end result, mad panic and hysteria! In contrast Google makes on average 550 changes to its algorithm every year, why? To improve the overall customer experience and ensure that the content we are served is relevant – exactly the same as Facebook are trying to achieve with their latest change. I’ve read what feels like literally hundreds of posts and articles this year already about the detrimental effect this is going to have on publishers, brands and media companies, the truth is, I actually don’t think things are going to be all that bad. In fact the complete opposite, I for one am sick of waking up every morning and scrolling through my newsfeed only to see advertisement after advertisement and tons of sponsored content that has zero relevancy to me and my everyday life, clearly I am not alone! Facebook has plenty of reasons for making these changes, main factors including the negative publicity of late, particularly surrounding the US general election and fake news, but more than that has to be overall user experience. It is of no surprise that Facebook numbers have been slowing and sentiment has not been as positive as in previous years, due to all the clutter it does feel that the ‘social network’ has lost its ‘social’ element! How will this effect brands? The days of organic reach are definitely over. Businesses already have to invest in ads on Facebook to get their content in front of their audiences. But there will be fewer opportunities to buy ads, so the prices will be higher. However, the relevance and return is likely to be much larger. Quality will prevail and the ‘spray and pray’ approach used by most advertisers recently will no longer drive results! I think the change will also impact the way that we talk about the value of Facebook for advertising, and that the meaningful interactions that are important in paid really are about driving business outcomes, and not about driving engagement for the sake of engagement. If anything, this update will further support the point of view I have on using paid social to drive true business objectives—not engagements—for a while now. It will also impact the way we monitor the performance of any boosted content, in case we do see an impact there. Additionally, paid placements are largely unaffected by the change. Advertisers who boost organic content may see a small impact if the content did not receive enough meaningful interactions before it was boosted, but I really think the impact will be minimal. My advice to brands is to: • Publish less content via your Facebook page, but focus on more meaningful content that reinforces key brand messages • Use Facebook advertising for awareness and promotions • Stop any engagement baiting in your posts now—the kind of posts that say, ‘Like this for yes, angry for no,’ and so on. This will not work • Stop posting any content with a link to your blog or website. You cannot rely on Facebook for traffic