New this week on the Inside Network Job Board: Lowe’s, Fiveonenine, SponsorPay 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: Townsquare Media,  Lowe’s, Sociable Labs, Fiveonenine GamesSponsorPayIMVU,  Sneaky GamesGameHouse,  Ryzing, Machine ZoneKing.comKixeyePopCap GamesNuukster and SoJo Studios.

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 Marketing Bible - The Guide to Marketing your Brand, App, Website, or Content Inside Facebook

Facebook roundup: Optimal, Instagram, TBG Digital, action spec ads

Optimal launches free tool ranking brand pages - Optimal, Inc., the creators of Optim.al, a social media advertising and audience data platform, released its Optimal Index to rank brands on Facebook by a metric besides Likes. The index is calculated by taking a brand page’s engagement rate, multiplied by the weighted-average of Facebook’s cost per click estimate for the page, multiplied by the number of Likes the page has. Walmart is currently the highest-ranked page in the index.

FTC launches investigation into Instagram acquisition - The Federal Trade Commission has begun an investigation into Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram that could delay the closing of the deal. The investigation does not imply any wrongdoing. The agency looks into most mergers valued at more than $66 million. Facebook bought Instagram for $1 billion.

TBG study shows how Facebook ad CTR varies by industry – Ads for beauty and fitness brands had the highest clickthrough rate on Facebook, according to an analysis of billions of ad impressions from 235 TBG Digital clients in the past year. Finance-related ads had the lowest CTR. Other industries’ average CTRs by day can be seen to the right. This information can help companies benchmark their own success with Facebook ad campaigns.

Facebook releases ad preview tools - Facebook now offers developers an Action Spec Preview Tool to help them preview what Sponsored Stories for their apps will look like using the new action spec ad beta. Facebook also launched an ad preview API for previewing ads for existing ad groups, ad creatives and creative specifications.

Inside Facebook’s pre-IPO hype

Facebook has completed the first week of its roadshow appearances ahead of an initial public offering that could value the company at up to $96 billion when it lists its shares on the Nasdaq next week.

Many analysts are bullish about the stock, with Sterne Agee initiating coverage at “buy” and Wedbush Securities assigning Facebook an “outperform” rating, according to the Wall Street Journal. The social network set its price range at $28 to $35 a share. The range was lower than some might have expected, considering that company shares went for $44.10 on secondary exchange SharesPost in March. Now CNBC reports that the company plans to increase that price range based on the demand it saw this week and Reuters reports that the IPO is already “oversubscribed” with eager investors. Then again, Bloomberg’s sources say that demand has been lower than expected.

Executives are expected to continue to meet with investors around the country next week before setting a final stock price on Thursday and floating the shares on Friday. Here is a recap of what happened since Facebook began its roadshow and what effect it might have on the IPO.

Last month, the social network reported revenues of $1.058 billion for the first quarter of the calendar year — a 45 percent increase from the first quarter last year, but 6 percent less than the previous quarter. This worries some investors, and Facebook responded with an amendment to its S-1 filing to confirm that the number of daily active users is currently outpacing the increase in number of ads Facebook shows in part because of increased mobile use and product decisions that reduced the number of ads on some pages. For instance, Timeline shows fewer ads than traditional profiles and pages did. The company says in the filing, “Our culture emphasizes rapid innovation and prioritizes user engagement over short-term financial results.”

Facebook also issued amendments to address its ongoing patent battle with Yahoo. The social network received a letter from Yahoo warning that technology used in Facebook’s Open Compute Project hardware may violate 16 Yahoo patents. So far, Yahoo has taken no further legal action against Facebook, possibly because of the controversy surrounding CEO Scott Thompson’s false academic credentials. Another Facebook S-1 amendment included new information about $796 million in restricted stock units that the company recently granted to employees.

Many investors continue to wonder how Facebook’s monetization efforts will perform on mobile devices, where it so far has shown an immaterial number of ads. The company’s current model for mobile advertising is also limited in that an advertiser cannot pay to reach whichever users they want. With Sponsored Stories, a user must already be connected to a brand — or have a friend that is — in order to see the brand’s content in their feed.

That said, Facebook this week revealed two potential new sources of revenue it is currently testing: paid apps and a way for users to pay to highlight their posts within friends’ News Feeds. These are both limited tests, which the company spokespeople downplayed. Although we’re skeptical about whether the highlight feature will ever expand to more users and if paid apps will be successful, the new App Center seems to be a good move to encourage developers to stay on the platform and get investors to make comparisons between Facebook and Apple.

There have been some ups and downs, with news of a potential FTC investigation into the Instagram acquisition, and some critiques against CEO Mark Zuckerberg for not showing up to some roadshow events and not dressing more professionally when he did. Most of this seems to be overplayed in the media and is not likely to have an actual effect on the company’s IPO.

In the next week, Facebook executives are scheduled to visit Chicago, Kansas City and Denver before two more days of meetings in Menlo Park, Calif., according to PrivCo. There is no word whether Zuckerberg will attend this portion of the roadshow. So far he made an appearance in New York City and in Menlo Park, but did not visit Boston with CFO David Ebersman and COO Sheryl Sandberg. Some have said this was for security reasons. Others believe it reflects Zuckerberg’s disinterest in the financial portion of running Facebook. That could turn off some investors, but it seems there are plenty of others looking to buy in their place.

Assuming the company does not delay the IPO for any reason, it will float its shares on Friday.

Etsy, Kickstarter, pages, music, more on this week’s top 20 emerging Facebook apps by MAU

Topping our list of emerging applications by monthly active users this week was Etsy, the e-commerce site for vintage and handmade items. There was no common theme among the rest of the apps on our list this week, but a few marketing campaign apps grew enough to be featured here.

We define emerging applications as those that ended with between 100,000 and 1 million MAU in the past week. This week’s top apps grew from between 20,000 and 220,000 MAU, based on AppData, our data tracking service covering traffic growth for apps on Facebook.

Top Gainers This Week

Name MAU Gain Gain,%
1.   Etsy 570,000 +220,000 + 63%
2.   We Heart It 430,000 +120,000 + 39%
3.   Domino’s Artisan Pizzas 2012 520,000 +90,000 + 21%
4.   CNET 150,000 +80,000 + 114%
5.   Kickstarter 160,000 +60,000 + 60%
6.   Eventbrite 200,000 +50,000 + 33%
7.   KAYAK 120,000 +40,000 + 50%
8.   Marvel XP 220,000 +40,000 + 22%
9.   nana10 310,000 +40,000 + 15%
10.   Sorteie.me 840,000 +40,000 + 5%
11.   Sweepstakes 860,000 +40,000 + 5%
12.   好康活動 Hot Deals 330,000 +40,000 + 14%
13.   MapMyRUN.com 300,000 +30,000 + 11%
14.   Nike 410,000 +30,000 + 8%
15.   Offerpop 400,000 +30,000 + 8%
16.   Profile Covers 640,000 +30,000 + 5%
17.   TuneIn Radio 200,000 +30,000 + 18%
18.   Vaseline Men’s 150,000 +30,000 + 25%
19.   Mixcloud 540,000 +20,000 + 4%
20.   PunchTab 130,000 +20,000 + 18%

A group of apps revolved around brands. Domino’s Artisan Pizzas 2012 topped this list, Marvel XP is a Disney website requiting login credentials, Nike and Vaseline Men’s also appeared. Then there were a series of apps designed for page administrators. Sorteie.me in Portuguese, Offerpop and PunchTab offer various tools.

News apps included CNET and the Hebrew app nana10. Pinterest-like site, We Heart It, was second on the list. Other services dependent upon Facebook for distribution purposes, like Kickstarter and Eventbrite made the list, too.

There was a running app, MapMyRUN.com, and a few music-related website apps, TuneIn Radio and Mixcloud.

All data in this post comes from our traffic tracking service, AppData. Stay tuned next week for our look at the top weekly gainers by monthly active users on Monday, the top weekly gainers by daily active users on Wednesday, and the top emerging apps on Friday.

Facebook gauges interest in new way to monetize users: ‘highlighted posts’

Facebook is currently testing a way for users to pay to promote their posts at the top of friends’ News Feeds, a spokesperson confirms to us.

The test, which is limited to a small percentage of users including some in New Zealand, places a “highlight” button next to Like and comment on a user’s Facebook posts. After clicking “highlight,” users will be taken through a payment flow. We’ve seen prices ranging from free to US$2, and users seem to be able to use PayPal, a credit card or Facebook Credits they have saved. The promoted post will appear at the top of friends’ News Feeds with the word “highlighted” below the post.

Although the social network constantly tests new features that do not become implemented more widely across the site, this particular feature is surprising for a number of reasons. Facebook has previously struggled with rumors that it would charge for its service, despite a note on its homepage that says, “It’s free and always will be.” Asking users to pay for friends to see their posts seems likely to fuel further speculation and hostility from some users. The company is also in the middle of its roadshow leading up to an initial public offering next week. As we noted when Facebook announced Wednesday it would begin a testing paid apps on its platform, it seems unusual for a company to implement potential new monetization strategies at this stage.

However, if tests show that users are interested in the feature, Facebook would be likely to expand its availability and highlighted posts could become a source of new revenue. The test is likely inspired by Tumblr, which in February began a highlighted posts feature that lets users pay $1 to make their posts more noticeable in readers’ dashboards. While this is an interesting approach for a startup that has previously never monetized, it seems odd that Facebook would try a similar test at this stage in the company’s development. The experiment reminds us of when in 2009 the company tested a way for users to give give each other Credits for content they shared in the feed — an idea that Facebook quickly scrapped without ever rolling out widely.

If highlighted posts did expand to more users, we can imagine people who have chosen to enable subscribers being interested in the feature. Though in its current state, users do not seem to get any data about the results of highlighting their posts, so it might be hard to determine its value. For example, a $2 cost to show a single post to a user’s 130 friends — the average according to Facebook’s statistics page in February — is a CPM of more than $15. Most users might not frame the cost in this way, and there may in fact be cases when a user would be willing to pay $2 to make sure that friends see a post. Perhaps a birth announcement, a post about looking for a roommate or a link for fundraising might qualify. Small business owners might also start to use the feature to promote their business this way rather than using pages and traditional ads, which are not guaranteed to show in News Feed.

Hypothetically, if Facebook could get every user in the U.S., Canada and Europe — where the company currently generates the bulk of its revenue — to highlight one post a year for the $2 price, it could bring in about $858 million in additional revenue. This is well above the $484 million it made from its payments business in the same region last year, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Still, giving users the option to pay to ensure that friends see their posts might lead some users to question what happens to their posts they don’t highlight. It does not reflect well on Facebook’ algorithms if users have to pay to get their most important posts seen. It also seems out of character for the company to make this sort of blatant revenue grab after much of the company’s pre-IPO talk involved managing investors’ expectations for how the social network approaches monetization. For example, in Facebook’s IPO filing it says, “Our culture emphasizes rapid innovation and prioritizes user engagement over short-term financial results.” And CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote in a personal letter to prospective investors, “These days I think more and more people want to use services from companies that believe in something beyond simply maximizing profits.”

Facebook re-introduced Sponsored Stories to News Feed in January, but these are content that brands and other advertisers pay to promote, not individual users. Last month a company spokesperson told us it would begin testing an option for page owners to more easily pay to promote their content to fans, but it did not suggest that users would be able to do the same for their own posts until a New Zealand blog reported the feature.

Below are images from Neowin.net whose writer, Owen Williams, has tested highlighted posts. If you have access to the feature, please share your experience with us in the comments.

 

 

Vitrue partners with 7 ad platforms to create loop between paid and owned media

Social enterprise software company Vitrue today announced a partnership with seven ad management companies to give its customers a way to track paid and owned media from its platform without necessarily forcing marketers to switch ad providers.

Vitrue’s Media Partner Program includes Involved Media, Marin Software, Nanigans, Optimal, SocialCode, Spruce Media and Unified, all of whom work with the Facebook Ads API to manage and optimize campaigns at scale. Vitrue has updated its Social Relationship Management platform with more collaborative workflow tools for community managers and media buyers, which could be increasingly useful as advertisers run Sponsored Stories and other ads that come directly from Facebook page posts rather than traditional ads with a headline, body copy and image.

The strategy of partnering with several ad providers could allow Vitrue to serve a wider range of customers than if it had decided to acquire a single company as others in the industry have done. Last year, ad platform Efficient Frontier acquired page management company Context Optional, and in February Vitrue competitor Buddy Media bought Brighter Option to create its new BuyBuddy solution for paid media.

Another Facebook marketing software company, Involver, recently announced partnerships with several of the companies now also working with Vitrue. Involver’s “Engagement Optimization API” can be incorporated into any ad platform to allow marketers to optimize Facebook campaigns based on post-click engagement within Involver applications.

Vitrue’s solution works a little differently. Members of the Media Partner Program log into Vitrue’s platform to see a brand’s Facebook page data and per-post metrics. Community managers have the ability to flag posts that receive high engagement and notify media buyers that the post might be a good one to apply paid media to.

In both cases, Involver and Vitrue can remain agnostic and offer customers a number of options for ad platforms. This eliminates the risk associated with acquiring a single company and then convincing customers to switch to a new ad service. Vitrue says it is looking to add more ad platforms to its partner program in the future.

Facebook to give all groups file-sharing capabilities

Facebook is expanding its group file sharing features to give all groups the ability share files between members, we’ve confirmed with a spokesperson.

Last month, the social network gave school-specific groups this functionality but it did not share that it would make the feature available widely until Mashable reported the news today. According to the Facebook Help Center, there will be a “Files” tab at the top of a group page and an “upload file” icon in the publisher. Users can share presentations, schedules, documents and other files with a group. Mashable says this excludes music files to avoid copyright infringement issues.

Documents within a group can be public or available to members-only based on the original privacy setting of the group. Public groups cannot make individual files members-only without making the entire group “closed” or “private.”

Previously, users could create and co-edit “docs” within groups, but these could not be printed or exported to other word processors. The new files feature does not allow online editing, but users can download files, make edits and upload a new version. When users upload a revised version of a file, the previous version of the file remains available.

Facebook acquired file-sharing company Drop.io in 2010, but we’ve learned this project was completely independent of that. Drop.io founder Sam Lessin was most recently involved with the Timeline redesign and organ donation initiative, according to his Facebook profile.

File-sharing will begin to roll out to all groups, regardless of size, today.

Image credit: Mashable

Facebook career postings: media solutions, analysts, recruiting, more

Facebook added several analytics and media positions this week on its Careers page. The company’s LinkedIn feed showed a few engineering and other positions available.

Posts added this week on Facebook’s Careers Page:

  • Operations Analyst
  • Analyst, Measurement Solutions (Chicago)
  • Analyst, Measurement Solutions (New York)
  • Pricing and Yield Analyst, Singapore
  • Product Marketing Manager, Ads
  • Network Capacity Planner
  • Technology Partner, Security
  • Technical Recruiter – Contract (Dublin)
  • Technical Resourcer (London)
  • Analyst, User Operations, Brazilian Portuguese (Dublin)
  • Operations Analyst
  • Technology Partner, Supply Chain/Logistics
  • Ad Operations Specialist, Mid Market Sales (Dublin)
  • Client Partner, Korea (Singapore)
  • Client Partner, LATAM (Miami)
  • Media Solutions (Austin)
  • Media Solutions (Buenos Aires)
  • Media Solutions (Chicago)
  • Media Solutions (Menlo Park)
  • Media Solutions (New York)
  • Media Solutions (Sao Paulo)
  • Media Solutions (Toronto)
  • Media Solutions, Norwegian (Dublin)
  • Media Solutions, Swedish (Dublin)
  • Administrative Assistant – Mobile

Jobs posted by Facebook on LinkedIn:

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

Facebook hires: engineering, design, counsel, more

Facebook this week expanded its design team with new hires from YouTube, Quora and Rdio, according to its LinkedIn feed.

 It also appears that Facebook cleaned out its job inventory again this week, as its Careers page showed many jobs removed since last week. Jobs included counsel, engineering, accounting, communications, recruiting and more.
  • Wilson Miner, Designer – former lead designer at Rdio.
  • Margaret Stewart, Designer – formerly worked at YouTube.
  • Elizabath Windram, Designer – formerly worked at Quora.
  • Soham Mazumdar, Software Engineer – former staff software engineer at Google.
  • Subhro Kar, Operations Engineer – former information systems architect at iXiGO.com.
  • Vinay Emani, Software Engineer – former student.
  • Carla Coll, User Operations Content Analyst – former student.
  • Vinay Satish Kumar, Quant – former student.
  • Nicol Wilson, Platform Marketing Events Operations Manager – former research administrator.
  • Virginia Vanga, Purchasing – former senior purchasing manager at Electronic Arts.

Prior listings now removed from the Facebook Careers Page:

  • Sr. Linux Systems Engineer
  • Corporate Counsel
  • Corporate Paralegal
  • Associate General Counsel, Labor & Employment
  • Director of Tax Operations
  • Communications Manager – Russia & Eastern Europe (London)
  • Marketing Communications Manager, APAC (Singapore)
  • Global Customer Marketing Lead
  • Fraud Investigator, Risk Operations (Austin)
  • Manager, Server Sourcing and Procurement
  • Product Manager, Insights and Measurement
  • Partner Engineer – Marketing Solutions (Chicago)
  • Partner Engineer – Mobile, HTML5
  • Partner Manager, API (London)
  • Technology Partner, Security
  • Technical Recruiter (London)
  • Technical Recruiter – Contract (Australia)
  • Technical Recruiter – Contract (Dublin)
  • Technical Recruiter – Contract (Hyderabad)
  • Technical Recruiter – Contract (Singapore)
  • Technical Sourcer – Contract (Hyderabad)
  • Account Manager, Turkey (London)
  • Account Manager – French (Dublin)
  • Head of Account Management, LATAM
  • Manager, APAC Platform Partnerships (Singapore)
  • Manager, Platform Partnerships – Japan (Tokyo)
  • Analyst, User Operations (Hyderabad)
  • Analyst, User Operations, Dutch (Dublin)
  • Analyst, User Operations – Indonesian (Dublin)
  • Analyst, User Operations – Vietnamese (Dublin)
  • Associate, User Operations (Hyderabad)
  • Client Partner, Politics
  • Client Partner – Czech (Dublin)
  • Client Partner – Dutch (Dublin)
  • Client Partner – French (Dublin)
  • Client Partner, Italian (Dublin)
  • Client Partner – Spanish (Dublin)
  • Client Partner – Turkish (Dublin)
  • Client Partner (Auckland), New Zealand
  • Client Partner (Madrid)
  • Client Partner (Milan)
  • Client Partner Hamburg
  • Client Partner Sweden
  • Client Partner, Poland
  • Client Partner, Turkey (London)
  • Client Partner (Poland)
  • Client Partner (Sydney)
  • Pan Euro Client Partner (London)
  • Partner Manager, Marketing API (Dublin)
  • Asset Management Analyst
  • Asset Manager, Data Center
  • Platform Associate
  • Strategic Partner Development Associate, Gaming
  • SMB Marketing Associate (Dublin)
  • SMB Marketing Manager, German (Dublin)
  • Associate, Business Operations, API
  • Associate, Corporate FP&A
  • Administrative Assistant, Singapore
  • Administrative Assistant, Growth, Mobile & International

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

Bing expands Facebook integration with new social sidebar on search results pages

Bing redesigned its search engine to include a sidebar that displays information from Facebook friends and other social media sources that might be able to help with a search topic.

The sidebar includes four components:

  • An “ask friends” feature that lets users post a question to Facebook
  • A list of “friends who might know” about the topic of a user’s query. This pulls information from users’ Facebook profiles to make suggestions based on what friends Like, photos they’ve added, where they’ve lived, work history, where they went to school and more.
  • Suggestions of experts, enthusiasts and other “people who know” about a topic based on their public activity and authority on networks like Twitter, Quora, Foursquare, Google+ and others.
  • An activity feed of real-time posts and queries, from which users can answer their friends questions and Like posts. This activity will simultaneously appear on Bing and Facebook.

The change reflects the increasing influence of the social and interest graphs on products across industries. However, Bing made it a point to distinguish itself from Google, which recently received criticism for its Search Plus Your World redesign that gives prominence to pages with some connection to Google+. Microsoft, despite its longtime partnership with Facebook, chose to include results from a number of networks and separate its social results from traditional topic-based results with the addition of the sidebar.

The sidebar looks similar  Facebook’s Ticker, which has also influenced how Spotify displays activity from a user’s friends. Its functionality is similar to TripAdvisor’s instant personalization which helps users find and connect with friends who are likely to have information about a travel destination based on what is available in their Facebook profiles. Bing builds on this concept by letting users post to News Feed and tag friends to notify them directly when there’s a question they might be able to answer. All of these features are available on mobile devices, but they are shown at the bottom of the search results. The new sidebar will roll out gradually, but users can request access here.

Bing began its Facebook integration by indexing page updates and publicly visible links posted by users in June 2010. Later that year Microsoft used Facebook instant personalization to influence its people search capabilities and to display Likes. Bing expanded its Facebook integration last year and began personalizing the rank of results based on the Likes of a user’s friends.

Here is an example of how someone might use the sidebar after searching for information about Honolulu.

 

 

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