Nieman Foundation at Harvard
HOME
          
LATEST STORY
If Google suddenly had real competition in search, how would news publishers’ world change?
ABOUT                    SUBSCRIBE
April 8, 2016, 2:02 p.m.
Business Models
LINK: media.fb.com  ➚   |   Posted by: Ricardo Bilton   |   April 8, 2016

Despite Facebook’s unrivaled status as a distribution platform for publishers, it hasn’t always been as effective at helping publishers make money. The latest update to its ad policy might help change that.

Facebook said this morning that it will start letting verified celebrities, influencers, and publishers use their pages to post content they’ve created with brands. The new policy will let publishers post videos (including 360º and Facebook Live video), photos, or articles (Instant or otherwise) that explicitly mention or feature brands.

That’s good news for the many publishers that have made branded content core to their businesses. Being able to post that branded content on Facebook means publishers can sell Facebook reach as a part of their advertising products — without fear of punishment from Facebook.

“This update is something that media companies, public figures, influencers, and marketers have been asking for, as branded content is a growing and evolving part of the media landscape,” Facebook product manager Clare Rubin and VP of Partnerships Nick Grudin wrote in a blog post today.

branded-content-e28093gaga-screenshot-final

Alongside the tweak, Facebook also introduced a new tool that will let publishers tag brands in their sponsored content posts. That gives users some indication that they’re reading an ad, but it also gives brands better insight into how well their posts perform. Facebook says that publishers must use this tag for all branded content posts.

Facebook wins out with the new deal as well. By letting branded content on its platform, Facebook also increases the chance that brands will then pay to get those branded posts in front of more Facebook users. (Facebook says it isn’t taking a cut from these branded content deals.)

The update comes with some limitations. Publishers won’t be able to post “overly promotional” content such as preroll ads or videos with watermarks.

The move puts Facebook on par with YouTube, which has long been a strong platform for publishers and others looking to make money off branded campaigns.

Show tags
 
Join the 60,000 who get the freshest future-of-journalism news in our daily email.
If Google suddenly had real competition in search, how would news publishers’ world change?
The tech giant’s ongoing antitrust trial raises the possibility of the federal government, Apple, or both giving Google its first meaningful search competition in decades.
Aiming for 500,000 subscribers by 2026, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution takes a big swing on growth
“We want to cloak ourselves in all things Atlanta. And frankly, in recent years, we haven’t necessarily done that.”
“Don’t fight the future”: Taylor Lorenz on news publishers’ (continuing) adjustment to the internet
“The personality-driven model of news is not going away.”