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Mark Zuckerberg should make us pay for swiping right

There’s little doubt that dating will benefit Facebook’s business, which will keep investors happy. But for something more long term, Zuckerberg should swipe right on some alternative revenue sources.

Updated on: May 02, 2018 06:13 PM IST
Bloomberg | By
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Facebook Inc.’s push into online dating is an attempt to wed people ever more tightly to the social network. It makes sense given that the sparkle has gone out of the relationship with its 2.1 billion users. But there’s something Mark Zuckerberg could do to make this new Tinder rival even more of a fresh start: charge for it.

At the social media giant’s annual developer conference, Zuckerberg said: “We want Facebook to be somewhere where you can start meaningful relationships.” (AP Photo)
At the social media giant’s annual developer conference, Zuckerberg said: “We want Facebook to be somewhere where you can start meaningful relationships.” (AP Photo)

At the social media giant’s annual developer conference, Zuckerberg said: “We want Facebook to be somewhere where you can start meaningful relationships.” Yet given all the controversy around its treatment of user data, the company is still repairing its own ties with its customer base. Many users still want to see evidence of change before they renew their commitment.

That’s not to say that Facebook won’t make a success of this, whether it charges or not. Zuckerberg says it has at least 200 million members who are single.

It’s just that in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, the billionaire is under real pressure to reduce his heavy dependence on using personal data to sell ads. If he was taking those concerns to heart, he’d be seeking different ways to monetize all those users. Facebook Dating would be a good place to start.

Dating apps and websites such as Match.com and Tinder charge membership and subscription fees to unlock some features, such as unlimited swiping. Their parent company Match Group Inc. had sales of $1.3 billion last year, about 3 percent of Facebook’s total revenue, but generated a healthy 33 percent net margin. It’s no surprise that Match stock plummeted after the Zuckerberg bombshell.

The problem for Facebook is that it would need a bevy of similar adjacent products even to start to chip away at the dominance of the ad business, which makes up 98 percent of sales. Developing such paid-for services would need heavy investment, diluting Facebook’s chunky returns on capital.

Instead, it will hope that dating leads to engagement. People are becoming less enamored of the social network: time spent there declined by 5 percent in the December quarter, and Zuckerberg tellingly didn’t share that data for the three months through March. A dating tool will inevitably boost engagement numbers, particularly in that critical 18-35 age bracket so beloved by advertisers.

There’s little doubt that dating will benefit Facebook’s business, which will keep investors happy. But for something more long term, Zuckerberg should swipe right on some alternative revenue sources. Bloomberg Gadfly

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners.

 
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