General Motors Co and Facebook Inc are discussing the return of the
US automaker as a paid advertiser
Detroit/San Fransisco: General Motors Co and Facebook Inc are discussing the return of the US automaker as a paid advertiser almost two months after GM said it would stop running ads on the social networking website, sources close to the situation said on Tuesday.
Although
the two companies remain far from reaching an agreement, Facebook
executives have assiduously courted the world’s largest carmaker. One source
said Facebook was not pushing for GM’s immediate return, but offered to
provide data showing the effectiveness of the website’s paid ads.
Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg
sent GM Chief Executive Dan Akerson an e-mail urging the company to
reconsider its decision shortly after the third-largest US advertiser
pulled its ads in May, a move that undermined confidence in Facebook on
the eve of its highly-anticipated initial public offering, according to
sources who were not permitted to speak publicly because the talks are
ongoing.
At a
global advertising conference in Cannes, France, last month, Facebook
global sales head Carolyn Everson sought out GM’s global marketing chief
Joel Ewanick to continue face-to-face talks, leaving open the option of
GM returning to the fold, sources said. Facebook offered the same
information it provides to all of its big advertisers, but did not offer
any concessions.
GM and Facebook declined comment. The news was earlier reported by the Wall Street Journal.
Three
days before Facebook’s 18 May IPO GM said it was dropping paid ads on
the website because they had little impact on consumers.
The
decision by the carmaker, which spent $10 million on Facebook in 2011,
was the first highly visible crack in Facebook’s strategy and
underscored doubts about whether advertising on Facebook works better
than traditional media.
GM emphasised at the time that it would retain its Facebook pages, for which it paid no fees, to market its cars and trucks.
People
familiar with a meeting that took place before GM’s announcement in May
said Facebook officials failed to convince GM’s top marketing executives
of the value of Facebook’s paid ads.
GM, which ranks behind Procter & Gamble
Co and AT&T Inc in advertising spending, spent $1.1 billion on US
ads last year, according to ad-tracking firm Kantar Media. Overall, GM’s
spending on advertising rose 5.2 percent last year to $4.48 billion,
according to the automaker’s annual report.
It spent about $271 million on online display and search ads excluding Facebook advertising, Kantar said.
GM
previously said it spends about $40 million on its Facebook presence,
but only about $10 million of that was paid to Facebook for advertising.
The remaining budget covers the creation of content and the advertising
and media agencies involved, the newspaper said.
GM also announced in May it would not advertise in next year’s Super Bowl because it was too expensive. Ewanick has led a consolidation of GM’s ad agencies globally that is expected to save the Detroit company $2 billion over five years.
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