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Is Facebook Dead for Pet Businesses?

is facebook dead

Facebook is creating a lot of waves recently. Amid their data collection scandals, Zuckerberg’s announcement earlier this year that the company is de-emphasizing branded content and everything else, it’s easy to wonder: Should my pet business bother using Facebook anymore?

This question was recently posed, ironically, in a Facebook pet-business group I belong to. Plenty of pet professionals chimed in, some saying they’d scaled back their Facebook activities and others saying the platform is still their top social performer.

Being a data geek myself, the team and I were already watching the numbers to see whether Zuckerberg’s January announcement would spur higher prices for Facebook advertising. (As of writing this post, average Facebook ad rates for pet businesses have actually been lower or the same as those we saw this time in 2017, depending on the ad objective.)

But the group’s question made me want to look deeper…

Here’s what we found:

  • Facebook continues to be either the top or second-largest social media platform around according to the Pew Research Center. This said, growth appears to have slowed since April 2016.

But this doesn’t answer how the platform is performing for pet businesses, an area where data is too-often scarce or non-existent. So we randomly sampled the Google Analytics data for 12 healthy pet businesses and looked at the data for the beginning of the year.

  • Of the 12 businesses, Facebook is still the number one social media driver to their website for 8 of them. (The other 4 business’s top referrers ranged depending on type and location of business.)
  • 5 of the 8 saw significant increases in visitors going from Facebook to their website in 2018 versus the same three-month period in 2017.
  • Only 2 of the 12 saw declines in traffic from Facebook, and the declines were not as large as the gains seen by the 5.

So is Facebook dead for pet businesses?

The data says—No, not yet.

The future of Facebook’s business use is nebulous, indeed. The stuff you actually see brands doing on their pages (organic page optimization and growth) has inarguably stalled for many in the last two years as Facebook has continued to reduce organic reach and increase the need for paid placements. However, even so, Facebook remains the strongest channel for many.

The key is shifting how Facebook is used and prioritized to make sure your pet brand’s business and customer needs are being met.

No matter how you look at it, clearly Facebook is under attack and an increasingly controversial platform to spend time on as a business. Nevertheless, the data shows there is still opportunity for brands to reach consumers.

So, when thinking about where your brand and business needs to invest your time, let’s ask a different question. What is this channel doing for your consumer?

Think about WHO you’re trying to reach and WHAT you’re trying to do before deciding whether Facebook or another social platform is the best one to throw your time and money into. The answer just may surprise you.

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