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Today Facebook has announced something more important than you may realize: Facebook Gifts, and it’s happening just as we predicted.
Facebook’s $80 million+ post-IPO acquisition of Karma was enough to raise questions as to what would happen next, considering that Facebook made it clear that this was not merely a talent acquisition. Now, the future of the Facebook may change.
Long-term users will remember that Facebook has tried to launch gifts in
the past, but only with essentially worthless, digital goods. Today’s
move is an entirely different animal, however, as the company is
stepping foot into new territory by way of its Karma acquisition, with
hundreds of physical goods already for sale. Facebook is now taking
advantage of the growing popularity
of social commerce trends (which it essentially caused), with a
centralized gifting platform that lets the social giant gather countless
addresses, credit card details and relationship data, all while further
roping in 3rd party brands and skimming a little off the top.
As
Facebook explains, its gifts are intended as a new way for “millions of
people” to celebrate moments together. Users can now send gifts from
birthday reminders, or from their friend’s timeline. Gifts can be public
or private. Facebook even makes the process relatively frictionless,
allowing you to pay right away or alterately add your card details
later. Then, whomever receives the gift simply unwraps it digitally,
enters in their address and finds it on their doorstep days later.
Aunts, uncles and grandparents are about to have a field day, and kids
will finally understand why it’s not such a bad idea to have their
relatives on the social network.
Facebook will likely target which gifts it recommends as time goes
on. For example, pricer, high-end products could be targeted towards
users with (what look to be) higher paying jobs, while current college
students could be targeted for more novel gifts like Dave Matthews Band
tickets or beer posters. Of course, this could all feed into Facebook’s
advertising network too, where as long as the gifting inventory
eventually expands, users will be able to purchase whatever’s advertised
without ever leaving Facebook. That’s where the obvious Facebook VS Amazon comparison comes into play.
If
this gifting practice becomes a standard activity for users, you can
bet that Facebook’s entire monetization strategy will adapt — as we’ve said,
there’s a $100 billion market in the US for pre-paid gift cards
alone. The best part, however, is that this doesn’t even need to become
common for the company to do extremely well. If every Facebook user
receives just one gift for their birthday over the next year, Facebook
will have sold 955 million gifts. Selling just a miniscule portion of
that number could even be considered a success.
Now, we’re left wondering what will happen to the likes of Wrapp, Wantful, DropGifts and Give.it. It’s
clear that Facebook is on track to taking up Apple’s old habits;
letting creators innovate onto its platform, only to replicate those
same features natively. Considering how deep Facebook Gifts will be
integrated, this is pretty much a black spot for everyone else in the social gifting space.
How aggressively Facebook plans to pursue today’s launch has yet to
be shown, but there’s no doubt that the potential is absolutely massive.
Users, hide your credit cards. Investors, get those mouths watering.
This is a big deal.
Source:
thenextweb.com
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