By Mark Schaefer
What a nightmare for Facebook and its advertising partners. The Verge reported:
Facebook knew about inaccuracies in the video viewership metrics that it provided to advertisers and brands for more than a year, according to documents filed as part of a potential class action lawsuit on Tuesday. Advertisers were duped into focusing on the social network under the belief that people were spending more time watching on Facebook than through other video platforms. The inflated data also led many media organizations to put an emphasis on Facebook video and chase views to the detriment of other editorial efforts.
“Facebook’s internal efforts behind the scenes reflect a company mentality of reckless indifference toward the accuracy of its metrics,” the plaintiffs said in Tuesday’s filing.
(Facebook acknowledged that it has mis-stated the statistics but said the lawsuit is without merit).
The issue is further complicated by the way Facebook made public statements in 2015 promoting video as the future and then demoting videos in a 2018 algorithm change. What is to be believed?
It makes you wonder what is going on with this company. Over the past five years, they have violated so many ethical standards that it’s hard to even keep track of it.
From an outsider’s perspective, it seems like Facebook has no moral compass.
Culture get set at the top of the company so it is then fair to conclude that Mark Zuckerberg has no moral compass.
A different path
Tom Webster and I faced our own metrics crisis in 2016. When I made a change to the design of my website, downloads of The Marketing Companion podcast episodes dropped by one-third. We had no explanation for it. So I immediately hired two separate people to investigate and explain what happened.
We found that the old site has a “pre-roll” feature that buffered episodes so it was easier to listen to shows. But when the buffering occurred, it counted as a download, even if the person never listened to the show (we later learned this is a common practice podcasters use to inflate download numbers).
Our response was immediate. We fixed the technical problem and contacted our sponsors as soon as we knew what was going on. We explained the situation and offered a special deal to make them whole, since our numbers had been inflated. Our business partners were gracious and the problem was rapidly resolved.
It’s an easy solution
I’m not recounting this story to come across as heroic or special. There’s nothing special about it. It’s just the way you do business. It’s the normal way you handle problems and serve your customers.
Almost all of Facebook’s problems could be solved simply.
Just be normal.
Simply act how you’re supposed to act in the business world.
And it’s not just Facebook. There seems to be a grotesque lack of business ethics in big tech in general.
It makes me sick when you think about the potential for good social media had when this all started. The social web is becoming a a very deep cesspool. I hate that.
What’s your view?
Mark Schaefer is the chief blogger for this site, executive director of Schaefer Marketing Solutions, and the author of several best-selling digital marketing books. He is an acclaimed keynote speaker, college educator, and business consultant. The Marketing Companion podcast is among the top business podcasts in the world. Contact Mark to have him speak to your company event or conference soon.
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