Saturday, April 6, 2013

Facebook 'Home' Will Be Great for Ad Data, but Bad for Brand and Media Apps

adweek reporting:
Weaker app presence for brands, and stronger data for Facebook. Those are two key reactions to Facebook's home screen replacer "Facebook Home," which was ceremoniously unveiled today with launch partners HTC and AT&T at a press conference at the digital giant's headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif.
The new downloadable system lets Android users customize their home screens with multiple Flipbook-like capabilities—dubbed "cover feeds" by Facebook. It also allows people to more easily digitally chat with friends while performing other tasks on a phone such as reading online articles. The avatar-looking features are called "chat heads," which accompany notifications on the home screen when someone is pinging you to chat.
The HTC First will be the first phone to come preloaded with Facebook Home. The device will be available through AT&T for $100 starting on April 12, while other Android-employing carriers like Samsung and Lenovo are expected to eventually release phones with Facebook Home. The new super app treatment will be available for tablets in several months, per the company. 
Facebook's apps such as Instagram, Camera and Messenger will be baked into the Android phones. Third-party apps from the likes of the Associated Press, Seamless, Twitter, Google Maps, etc., will be accessible—but now tucked away and requiring a couple of swipes to access. It creates less clutter for the phone owner, but less presence for those competitive third-party apps.
What Facebook Home means to advertising on mobile app networks remains to be seen.
http://www.adweek.com/news/technology/facebook-home-will-be-great-ad-data-bad-brand-and-media-apps-148394?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=04-05-2013&utm_campaign=technology_today

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