Facebook Updates Photo Uploading, Events UI

Facebook has made two UI changes to the photo uploading process and the Events feature in the past couple of days.

The new photo uploading process, announced yesterday, allows users to see photo uploads in real-time. While they wait for the full upload to finish, users can start adding details — such as tagging people in the photos or setting the location for the album. Once the upload is complete, users can review the album before posting. Here’s the example screenshot provided by Facebook:

The new UI also includes a prompt to tag the location where the photos were taken. Overall, it’s another step by Facebook to increase the amount of socially relevant metadata users are associating with photos.

The Events feature update involves several key changes — including a Bing-generated map that allows viewers to get directions to the venue, grouping all response actions in one place on the page, and removing the emphasis from the “Not Attending” response option (which some event owners didn’t want to show).

Facebook Events engineer Bob Baldwin shared the following layout screenshot on his Facebook page, detailing all of the UI elements that now make up the Events page:

These changes bring the Events page layout more in line with recent changes to other parts of the site, and also mark yet another Bing integration inside Facebook.

Facebook Careers Postings: Patents, Engineering, Mobile and More

Facebook appears to be looking for employees to help the company deal with patents, mobile, sales and recruiting. We gather this information from the company’s Careers Page, and this week there were no postings on its LinkedIn feed to report.

Posts added this week on Facebook’s Careers Page:

  • Patent Counsel
  • Software Engineer, Benchmarking
  • Data Warehouse Operations Engineer – 1110006 (Menlo Park)
  • Mobile User Interface Engineer
  • Software Engineer, Generalist
  • Software Engineers – SWE1110B (Menlo Park)
  • Software Engineers SWE1111M (Menlo Park)
  • Head of Sales, Poland
  • Director, Platform Operations
  • Global Associate, Business Operations (NYC)
  • Strategic Sourcing Manager
  • Recruiting Lead (Austin)
  • Technical Recruiting Lead
  • Product Manager, Email
  • Quantitative Data Analyst
  • Policy Advisor – Privacy
  • Data Analyst (Menlo Park)
  • Account Manager – Team Lead (London)
  • Manager, Italian or Spanish Online Sales Operations (Dublin)
  • Client Partner – Global Marketing Solutions
  • Client Partner, MENA
  • Client Partner, Turkey (London)
  • Administrative Assistant
  • Online Marketing Associate (Palo Alto)

Who else is hiring? The Inside Network Job Board presents a survey of current openings at leading companies in the industry.

TBG Digital Study: High Conversion Performance in Facebook’s Social Context Ads

TBG Digital, a Facebook advertising and social media specialist company, has released data based on a recent client study that indicates social context ads perform more effectively than non-social context ads, according to certain metrics. The findings support a 2010 Nielsen study published when social context ads were introduced, which indicated these ad campaigns impacted brand recall by 10% with 2% improvement on purchasing intent.

TBG Digital analyzed the difference in cost-per-click conversion rates between social context ads and non-social context ads, finding ample reasons to side with social context advertising. The analysis was based on a single client, a popular entertainment brand showcased at f8. The advertiser spent $60,000 across a 14-day period, using on eight different advertisements on Facebook. The campaign accumulated 436 million impressions.

The company claims it saw a 32% improvement in purchasing intent when using social context ads. While cost-per-click remained constant between non-social context and social context ads, click-through rates were lower for social context ads. In this specific study, non-social context ads took 132 clicks to achieve a conversion, while it only took 99 clicks for social context ads to achieve a conversion. The client paid $1.37 per click, so the difference in cost per acquisition equated to 44 dollars when using social context ads.

TBG Digital indicates there are limitations to the campaigns, primarily due to the URL structure in the Ads API: traffic can only be sent to the advertiser’s home page. For example, “www.company.com” would link properly, but “www.company.com/offer” would not. Most companies use the social context ads to advertise a particular event, new product or place, and sending traffic to the homepage is a tedious sidestep. Facebook campaigns ultimately don’t take users to their intended landing page. Customers may get lost and divert attention, or at the very least, consume more time than necessary to get to the right destination.

Social context ads are built with a text and image box, standard to Facebook ads, with the addition of visible endorsements beneath the ad. The endorsements note the number of friends associated with a user who Like the Page, group, event or application. These ads are designed to leverage the social interactions that users are comfortable seeing in their News Feeds. The similar aesthetics and language between social context ads and adjacent News Feed bridges these two major Facebook components. For example, users are accustomed to seeing “John Smith likes Company” in news feeds, so the similar aesthetics in social context ads seems to make them more approachable and inviting. As we’ve written previously, advertisers can access social metric reports on the impact of the ads.

Facebook Now Showing Up to Six Display Ads on Some Pages

Facebook has increased the number of display ads in many areas of the site from four to five and sometimes six, which puts about half of the ads below the fold where users must scroll to see them.

The change is confirmed by Facebook’s Help Center, which says that “Up to five Marketplace ads may show at one time on any given page.” On numerous occasions, however, we’ve seen up to six ads displayed on some Pages as of this morning:

Like the last time Facebook made a similar change to display ads, it’s possible that this change will reduce ad click-through rates. Bid prices on these ads likely will not change dramatically, however, for advertisers paying on a CPC basis.  Facebook likely found in testing that adding the extra ad added incremental revenue without meaningfully impacting user experience; recent Facebook 2011 revenue estimates range from $2 to $4 billion.

Additional reporting by Brittany Darwell.

Facebook Testing “See Likes,” Updating Language for Page Insights

Facebook seems to be testing a new shortcut feature to the Insights tab that allows developers to see who Likes a Page.

Based on a walkthrough from a tipster and the included screenshot above as reported by All Facebook, it appears as though this shortcut allows Page managers to click a link from the Insights analytics screen to show photos of Facebook users that have Liked the Page. The tipster arrived at the updated Insights tab by clicking “Like this link” just below where the number of Likes appear on a Facebook Page that the tipster manages. We have not seen this new shortcut feature in action for ourselves.

While potentially a useful shortcut for developers, this update also appears to fall in line with broader language updates Facebook has been making. As an example, the screenshot at right shows a change in the way post Insights are displayed to Page admins. As opposed to traditional terminology like “impressions” or “feedback %,” we see here “people reached” and “people talking about this,” which is in line with the language introduced on the new Insights Dashboard.

Additional reporting from Brittany Darwell.

Reviews and Discussion Tabs Now Removed from Facebook App Profile Pages

The previously announced removal of Reviews and Discussions from application profile pages has now gone into effect.

The removal of Reviews mainly affects developers that solicit reviews for their apps, such as game developers fishing for a five-star rating. By killing the Reviews feature, Facebook is signaling a commitment to surfacing “good” apps only through social discovery.

As for the Discussion tab, Facebook is now encouraging developers to make use of Posts and Comments on their Walls as the best way to encourage conversation:

Facebook’s latest platform updates also reveal a new API for retrieving Page Questions and signal the end of App Reviews and Discussions. The API update follows on a previous Questions modification where developers could retrieve questions asked by users via the Graph API. Now developers can access Questions using a Page.

Facebook also set out a list of breaking changes, including info on the OAuth spec migration, Deprecating Dashboard APIs, removing the Bookmark URL, and updating the FB.Canvas.getPageInfo method so that it must be called with a callback function.

New This Week on the Inside Network Job Board: JibJab, Live World, Acquinity Interactive and More

The Inside Network Job Board is dedicated to providing you with the best job opportunities across social and mobile application platforms.

Here are this week’s highlights from the Inside Network Job Board, including positions at Acquinity InteractiveJibJab Media Inc., Live World, 6waves Lolapps, Checkpoint StudiosStorm8Electronic Arts, Deep Fried Gaming and TinyCo.

 

Listings on the Inside Network Job Board are distributed to readers of Inside Social Games, Inside Facebook and Inside Mobile Apps through regular posts and widgets on the sites. Your open positions are being seen by the leading developers, product managers, marketers, designers, and executives in the Facebook Platform and social gaming industry today.

Facebook Asking Users to Tag Photo Locations

Facebook is prompting some users to tag the location of their past photo albums.

A module on the top left of some Facebook pages offers a suggested place page based on the plain text location included in an album’s description, asking “Was this taken at [location]?” If a user clicks “Yes,” the album’s location will link to the appropriate place page and the album will appear on the Map feature of the new Timeline.

This action builds more links between users’ online activity and offline whereabouts, which could have implications for ads and other Facebook services. The change also helps venues or businesses whose pages could see more activity as a result of being tagged.

Although Facebook discontinued Places as a singular product on the platform, the company has since integrated location into several features. In August, Facebook introduced the option to tag photos, status updates and Wall posts with location. At F8, Facebook previewed a map section as part of the new Timeline profile.

By encouraging users to include location with the content they add and have added in the past, Facebook can create richer profiles of its users. This location data could be applied to influence Edge Rank and ad targeting.

Pages, Horoscopes, Photos, Birthdays, The Guardian, Windows and More on This Week’s Top 20 Growing Facebook Apps by DAU

Page tab applications were big on our list of growing applications by daily active users, as were also photo, birthday, and horoscope apps. The Guardian, Windows Messenger, iPad and a messenger app also made the list. The titles below grew from between 100,000 and 1.6 million DAU, based on AppData, our data tracking service covering traffic growth for apps on Facebook.

Top Gainers This Week

Name DAU Gain Gain,%
1.  Static HTML: iframe tabs 5,600,000 +1,600,000 +40%
2.  MyPad for iPad 2,100,000 +400,000 +24%
3.  Static Iframe Tab 1,500,000 +400,000 +36%
4.  الأبراج اليومية 360,000 +320,000 +800%
5.  Windows Live Messenger 18,200,000 +300,000 +2%
6.  The Guardian 400,000 +260,000 +186%
7.  MeinKalender – Geburtstag 580,000 +250,000 +76%
8.  Bubble Witch Saga 2,500,000 +200,000 +9%
9.  Diamond Dash 2,600,000 +200,000 +8%
10.  Facebook Messenger for Android 5,400,000 +200,000 +4%
11.  Horoscopes 2,300,000 +200,000 +10%
12.  MyCalendar – Birthdays 1,400,000 +200,000 +17%
13.  PlayStation®Network 340,000 +160,000 +89%
14.  Top Fifty Photos of Friends 180,000 +140,000 +350%
15.  Mynet Çanak Okey 530,000 +130,000 +33%
16.  Mis Fotos 470,000 +110,000 +31%
17.  picplz 180,000 +110,000 +157%
18.  SocialTimes iFrames Wizard 130,000 +110,000 +367%
19.  المزرعة السعيدة 760,000 +110,000 +17%
20.  Astrology 4,100,000 +100,000 +3%

Static HTML: iframe tabs grew by 1.6 million DAU, topping our list, then Static Iframe Tab by 400,000 DAU and SocialTimes iFrames Wizard grew by 110,000 DAU. A few other random apps made the list, including: MyPad for iPad which grew by 400,000 DAU, Windows Live Messenger by 300,000 DAU, The Guardian by 260,000 DAU and Facebook Messenger for Android with 200,000 DAU.

Birthday calendar apps MeinKalender – Geburtstag with 250,000 DAU and MyCalendar – Birthdays by 200,000 DAU. These pair of apps allow users to create a customized birthday calendar with friends’ birthdays but first must invite others. Photo apps on the list included Top Fifty Photos of Friends with 140,000 DAU, Mis Fotos 110,000 DAU and picplz 110,000 DAU. These apps usually ask users to Like, share or rate photos while generating feed or news ticker stories.

Then there are horoscope apps.  الأبراج اليومية grew by 320,000 DAU, Horoscopes by 200,000 DAU and Astrology with 100,000 DAU. These apps either ask users to subscribe to daily Wall posts, or to share the app with your friends.

All data in this post comes from our traffic tracking service, AppData. Stay tuned for our look at the top emerging apps on Friday.

Interview: Veteran Product Lead Josh Elman on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter — and Joining Greylock

Josh Elman has been in the trenches of product development since mid-1990s, with his resume reading like a who’s who of major web companies today. He started at Homestead and RealNetworks in the 1990s, and went on to hold key product roles at LinkedIn, Zazzle, Facebook and most recently Twitter.

But after 15 years building products, he recently became a principal at Silicon Valley venture firm Greylock Partners. We sat down with him recently to get his take on where Facebook and Twitter are going, and to learn more about his own plans now that he’s an investor.

Inside Facebook: If you were abandoned on an island for the rest of your life, would you rather be stuck with Mark Zuckerberg, Evan Williams or Jack Dorsey?

Josh Elman: Um, wow that’s a great question. I’d probably choose Ev. Ev, Zuck and Jack are great entrepreneurs, and I have massive respect for all three. But I’ve spent most of the most time with Ev and would love to spend more. Of the three, I feel closest and most stylistically connected to him. And I’d add Reid Hoffman to this list too — and should note that I’m happy to be working with him again.

IF: It’s 2011, and despite all the years of speculation about Facebook and Twitter killing each other, they are obviously coexisting now. But having worked at both companies, what do you predict for them (and other social platforms) in the future — let’s say in the next 5 years to keep that question somewhat focused?

JE: The way that I think about a lot of the opportunities in communication is: Where do we turn to as humans to find out what we care about in the world? In the past it was maybe newspapers, TV, radio. Now it’s mobile, iPads, computers, TV — we’re turning to all these different screens. But we really want an emotional connection to people we care about, to be more informed, and to be more able to react to conversations that are important and interesting around us.

There are three streams of important information. One of those, I think, is direct messages to me. That’s mostly email. I don’t know a single person who doesn’t do this (though I’m sure there are some) — the question of whether Facebook and Twitter can do to replace it gets asked a lot less now.

The second stream is what is happening with the people I love and care about. It’s obvious that Facebook has become that for everybody. When you want to know what’s going on with a friend, you have these incredible emotional moments on Facebook. You see them change jobs, celebrate their kids, share funny or important links.

The third stream is the world: What should I know about and care about? Everyone wants to know what’s happening. I think that Twitter is really redefining what that experience means. For example, recently there was an earthquake, and a lot of folks turned to Twitter to both share what happened and to verify what happened.

And for a lot of folks, there is a fourth stream — your work/professional stream. There are a lot of companies working on different facets of this between LinkedIn for your professional life, Google Apps, Salesforce, Asana, and more for your productivity. And email is still a huge component here.

IF: Right, that’s today, but all these companies are in some ways getting into each other’s turf.

JE: Think about it this way. If your favorite Italian restaurant hires a Japanese chef, who then starts doing Japanese noodles, you still wouldn’t go there for Japanese noodles unless it was the best Japanese noodles ever. You’d still want to go to an Italian restaurant for Italian food, or go to a Japanese restaurant for the noodles.

The specialized graphs of Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn make them each incredibly long-term defensible businesses.

Twitter is so focused on staying simple, real-time — like Mac is so much simpler than Windows. Facebook, while some people say it’s too complex, has grown to more than 800 million people worldwide. It’s clearly not too complex.

Humans will go to whatever is best, most visceral.

Facebook’s frictionless sharing is a big opportunity to pivot from connecting people and more to connecting info. That’s going to be a change for the way that people use Facebook, and I’m not sure if that will ultimately happen. But it’s a great move in many respects — Spotify’s new integration means that I can see if Eric is listening to Bieber again, and jab him about it. When we launched Facebook Connect, we thought that Facebook wasn’t just going to be a social network site for communicating with your friends. It was that you were going to go to have all sorts of great experiences. On the phone, web, offline locations, wherever — it makes us more connected as people, and helps serendipity happen.

IF: What about Google+?

JE: I have huge respect for them. They’ve had a great launch and done something most people in the tech industry had doubts about — whether Google could launch a compelling social product.

But it’s still incredibly early to tell if it’s mainstream and able to tap into visceral elements like Facebook and Twitter. It’s enabling certain types of conversations between people — big conversations, real-time debates, it’s more similiar to what we’ve seen on indie blogs than Facebook or Twitter.

IF: It feels more public than Facebook, but private enough that you know your audience….

JE: Yeah, and the interface naturally enables that. Facebook doesn’t always have great topical discussion.

It’ll be exciting to see how Google+ expands to other services.

IF: How do Facebook’s latest f8 launches change what developers should focus on?

JE: They introduced probably the most important change since at least 2008 when they did a big shift from profile boxes to make the news feed central. The idea of the ticker is transformative. Now frictionless sharing creates way to share everything, naturally broadcasted without being too heavy or too spammy or too awkward. In the past, it’d be annoying. Now it lets you find out what your friends are doing at a much bigger scale — great insight into lots of friends.

You can start to build really compelling discovery, like with Spotify — seeing that ten of your friends listened to Bieber.

The launch creates new opportunities for every kind of vertical or business where people interact around certain thing would bring other friends in. Companies who take advantage of it first are going to get big benefits.

Overall, it’s better alignment between Facebook and developers — broadcasting what you actually do which gets more friends sharing , and even more discovery.

IF: How should developers be trying to harness the Twitter platform?

JE: Twitter’s platform has only gotten stronger because Twitter now has 100 million active users. Comscore shows much higher visits, not just users. So it creates even more opportunities to help people create, interact with, and consume more content through Twitter. Twitter has talked about curation, analytics, and a few other platform businesses.

But the thing about building for any platform is that the moment you start building for one, you need to remember you’re building your own company and business. If I were to go build this great new restaurant discovery app, I’d want to use Twitter to share more, as a source of content and amplifer. But I would be focused on restaurant discovery, not being “X for Twitter.” The same is exactly true for Facebook.

IF: How are you approaching this from the investing perspective?

JE: I’m brand-new to this side, and it’s quite a bit different than the operating side. A lot of what I’m doing is listening and helping teams that we’re meeting as well as in the portfolio in any way that I can. Through my career, I’ve always been super excited about creating networks of people that enable new forms of communication and connection. Whether that’s Linkedin or Zazzle (connecting designers and artwork with buyers), or Facebook or Twitter, I’ve always been compelled by helping the founders realize these huge visions and build and grow these networks and platforms.

A lot of people talk about specific spaces like “mobile” or “social” or “local”. In general, I think any new consumer experience is going to tie in key elements and work across all of those. It needs to be relevant when you check the service on your phone and relevant when you want to pull something up on your TV in the future.

At Greylock, we tend to look for two things — a great product that people will want to use in meaningful ways, and durable distribution that ensures the product gets in the hands of as many users as possible.

Mostly I’m looking for great teams of people with big visions and a deep understanding and excitement about the path it takes to build a long-lasting company.

[Photo via Greylock Partners]

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