Privacy be damned. With Open Graph, Facebook’s addition to its online platform, the social networking giant is making a thinly veiled play to steal the search crown from Google. Open Graph will allow users to tailor social features on any website and share their modifications through Facebook. For publishers, Open Graph is a search marketing coup d’état allowing them access to Facebook’s four hundred million users whether or not they possess a brand page. For performance marketers, this unprecedented amount of information could improve targeted advertising. Oh and then there’s that little privacy thing.
Open Graph offers a “Like” button, which enables users to put their stamp of approval on certain products and services. In actuality, this feature enhances search utility. Why is this important? Well, in lieu of the recently revealed Nielson Facebook study results, social advocacy on ads increased buyer intent fourfold. The privacy implications of Open Graph may come back to bite Facebook but if it doesn’t, lead generation experts should send Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg a Christmas card. While Google’s philosophy is to improve the way the world accesses and searches for information, Facebook adheres to the belief that social advocacy in the extreme is the key to online advertising dominance.
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