In the end, all networks converge: Facebook marketplace is eating up the markets.

When I think of marketplaces in the future I see Facebook against the world.

Facebook vs eBay vs Amazon vs Shopify vs Craigslist Vs everyone-that-comes-along-in-any-vertical.

A few years ago this comparison would seem nonsensical.

But in the ever-expanding internet universe, these businesses are not commerce, fashion or social. They’re all network businesses.

This makes sense once you look under the hood. Networks don’t derive value from individuals but rather from their interactions. And ultimately, monetize in similar ways:

1. Ads

2. Listing fees

3. Rake.

(4. SaaS – but let’s leave that for another post).

So is it any wonder that marketplaces are targeting ads? 

Marketplaces go after ads and services 

eBay, in its 2019 annual report, mentions that marketplace net transaction revenue grew to 8.86% up from 8.25% as a result of “promoted listing fees”, a nifty way to promote sellers’ items.

The marketplace recorded $85bn in GMV and of the total revenue 7.5% was attributed to…ads. 

Amazon makes $12.5bn in revenue from ads, 23.5% up in 2020, which is not far from the rate at which AWS, the crown jewel of the company, is growing.

But it’s not only the behemoths.

Etsy made a controversial foray in advertising revenue. In contrast to the more commonly accepted model of “you may promote your listing” they forced advertisers to pay an extra % in case their item was sold as part of a cross-promotional effort namely Etsy advertising on their behalf across Pinterest, Facebook and Google. In other words, Etsy is no less than forcing their retailers to pay for the services of an outsourced marketing department which is genius and yet a step too far.

Instacart, Deliveroo, Uber Eats & basically any marketplace where sellers are not commoditized (will) offer a promotional boost and eventually seek the ad revenue as the next frontier.

Is it any surprise? Marketplaces exist to allow users to discover and for sellers to sell. 

All marketplaces started by offering the same things to users: Search amongst a plethora of suppliers and better pricing as a result of information symmetry. Today, marketplaces dominate by improving the experience of transacting with others.

eBay was the pioneer of this new wave of marketplaces. First it established trust with its sellers reviews. Later by purchasing PayPal, it added further ease and value to parties. Payments not only increased the profit margins but allowed the marketplaces to expand in value-adding services. eBay, using PayPal’s capabilities, added the “money back guarantee” and in doing so, created a new playbook for marketplaces.

One where marketplaces would use their low cost structures and high profit margins to reinvest in streamlining the experience. In turn, users would be happier, buy more and return more frequently. Whilst eBay might be the pioneer it is far from an isolated case.

Amazon revolutionized logistics with Prime and changed eCommerce forever. AirBnb offers insurance to hosts. ThredUp offers to sift through the seller’s clothes, price them and sell them saving them the hassle. OpenDoor is willing to buy house’s upfront. 

Meanwhile,  internet penetration and digital marketing maturity are increasing driving paid advertising costs up. In turn, capturing a bigger part of the customer lifetime value turned from opportunity into imperative. Capturing a higher chunk of revenue is necessary and a mix of advertising revenue and services offered is the way.

Yet there is one outlier in the game. A network first, Facebook didn’t need to worry about customer acquisition. All of us are there.

From ads to transactional revenue: the Facebook way

Engagement, growth and more engagement. The Facebook playbook in a nutshell. If anything was obvious early on it was that user engagement needs to be protected at all costs.

Facebook holds its users’ real identity and and the responsibility to protect it is a business imperative. Over the years, Facebook has invested significantly in what is internally called “community integrity”. The aim was clear: remove all posts that are net detractors of engagement and stymie growth. This was a key move their predecessors had missed and a precocious one at that.

At the same time functionality built around identity propelled their targeting capabilities to levels previously unmatched – even by Google -.

Sign in with Facebook was a key move that subtly, yet critically, allowed Facebook to break out of its own limitations. Businesses all over the web would allow Facebook to track their users outside of the network. This was a fantastic move for two reasons: better targeting directly improves targeting and thus revenue but also allows Facebook to gain critical data it didn’t have before whilst rooting across the whole worldwide web. 

Facebook had secured trust amongst its users. Now it also had intent. And with its advanced machine learning it could mine and classify all sorts of interactions. Recommendations requests. Preferences. And of course, commerce.

The social network had all the information it needed. The best part? Unlike any marketplace, users join and broadcast information for free allowing the business to continually reinvest in engineering tools and targeting capabilities.

What remained now, was to come up with an efficient way to expose that information. 

Facebook launched its marketplace in 2016 reaching 800m users in 2018; its foray on search, however, had started much earlier. In 2011, the entity graph was introduced which, given its scale and time, was an engineering marvel. 

The original focus was on people’s relationships. This quickly extended to map entities around each user. Facebook was already building an advanced ranking mechanism for listings and items. 

(https://thenextweb.com/facebook/2013/06/06/the-evolution-of-facebooks-entity-graph-the-structured-connections-behind-graph-search/

And somewhat like that Facebook had the foundations for a strong marketplace of its own with built-in acquisition, trusted connections, never-ending inventory and incredible targeting. 

Facebook marketplace model, Mark Tsirekas

The first steps were ultimately successful as the marketplace reinforced the existing flywheel.

It also provided yet another reason to be on Facebook which meant increase on the time users spent, data the network aggregated and ads served. So far so good. 

But to compete in the future of marketplaces, Facebook will need more; it will need to create vertical experiences for buyers and sellers alike.

So the question becomes: Is there anything stopping Facebook from doing so? 

The main thing in Facebook’s way is itself

Facebook’s ever-compounding flywheel is predicated on two things: zero cost of customer acquisition and targeting. This is the core asset powering everything very much like Google’s search is powering all its verticals. 

But when it comes to commerce, what got the company so far can be a challenge for the future. Specifically, there are a few things that will be roadblocks:

  1. Public market expectations
  2. Finite real estate 
  3. The Facebook Brand 
  4. Opportunity Cost
  5. Identity 

Public market expectations 

Most startups go through the “valley of death”. 

This is the concise way of saying that even for the most successful companies, innovation is costly and to kickstart the flywheel a business – marketplaces in particular – requires heavy investments upfront which may never pay off. 

Additionally as capital becomes cheaper and add-on services a strategy for marketplaces (think Opendoor), said experiments require increased costs per unit. 

Facebook owns $55B in cash or equivalents. So not a showstopper so far, right? 

Indeed, cash is not the core issue. Expectations are. Whilst a startup can stay away from the spotlight for years, Facebook can’t. Risky bets are likely not to be welcomed by analysts not just because of their short-term financial impact but also because they raise questions of strategic coherence. Each new service layer adds costs which are accompanied by more rigid organizational changes. Financing, delivery, insurance – all require customer support and bespoke operations. 

Should Facebook start building teams around these activities who knows how that would change the company profile in the years to come? It’s a risk worth considering. 

Finite Real estate 

You wouldn’t buy coffee from the Coca-Cola company, would you? But you might buy Costa Coffee which is owned by Coca-Cola. And in essence, you’re buying from Coca-Cola without thinking of it like that. A brand is a powerful asset but has its limits.

Facebook diversified its brand on social networks by owning Instagram, WhatsApp and Oculus amongst others. But when it comes to marketplaces it still uses its own brand and accompanying real estate.

So far, Facebook has doubled down on two products: Marketplace and Dating. 

Both of them have occupied prime real estate in the Facebook app facilitated by a navigation bar overhaul. The bottom navigation is dynamic serving whichever app the algorithm deems appropriate but currently seems to be pushing dating a lot. 

The Top Facebook Updates You Need to Know: October 2020
https://blog.hootsuite.com/facebook-updates-2/


The center of the bottom navigation is so prominent users will click on by accident. But what about all the other applications Facebook has created such as offers, movies and blood donations to name some? Surely, these can all be served by dynamic shuffling in the nav bar but to entrench a position in a user’s mind, more is needed. Facebook will need to spin off its successes for them to occupy their own space on the web and in the user’s mind. And of course that bears the question: would these be successful on their own, away from the mothership and how would that work?

The Facebook brand 

Then we have the elephant in the room meta-problem: the better Facebook gets at targeting, the more creepy people deem it to be. This is not a problem that can be shrugged off; the resulting clash is more than a nuisance. It’s an orthogonality between its primary and secondary value creating activities.

To put this better in perspective, consider how a firm value chain works. The value chain represents the set of activities a firm must perform in order to compete. The key idea here is that the activities summed provide a value that is larger than the individual cost.

Each firm has primary activities that pertain to the production of its services and goods and a set of secondary activities that supercharge the primary activity. 

As an example consider the cost of creating a pair of shoes.

Primary
Cost of material: £10.
Cost of labor: £10
Distribution: £10
Secondary

Design & branding: £10

Marketing: £10

Management: £10


Final retail price: £100. 

The key here is that if a business is selling the material is only making £10. So is another firm assembling the shoe (labor). But it’s the business that owns the design, marketing and management of production that reaps the excess value of the final price. 

And this is what great businesses do: operate an individual value chain synergetically to position itself  as a dominant player in the industry value chain.

Under that lens, here’s what the Facebook Value chain looks like for marketplaces. 

The primary activity for Facebook is to add more users to its network, keep them engaged, and then show them listings that are relevant to them across categories. 

Facebook value chain, Mark Tsirekas


And all of it is underpinned by excellent targeting capabilities which in turn rely on an endless stream of information people give Facebook. 

And here lies the conundrum. The better facebook gets at targeting and predicting the needs of the individual, the more disliked it becomes. It becomes “creepy”.

In all fairness, creepy is a compact way of saying that Facebook inadvertently surfaces the existential anxiety in all of us. Facebook’s algorithms expose our flaws, predict our desires and in doing so remind us how vulnerable and normal we all are.

Beyond philosophical implications, this is bad for business. Facebook is not “cool” and this is costing in terms of new community monetization and capturing value. 

While disliking the brand won’t be a showstopper for the daily mindless feed scroll, it certainly is an issue for services that Facebook would be primed to capitalize but require a different level of trust and brand association. 

Brand is important for a simple reason. Every purchase we make is a vote in the community and culture the brand stands for. 

eBay introduced a world of discovery and bargain. Staying at an Airbnb still maintains the edge of the experimental. Etsy supports the creators. 

But Facebook is a threat. 

Would anyone want Facebook to become their general practitioner, insurer and bank with which they pay both of the above? Unlikely. 

Opportunity cost

Corporate strategy argues the firm should leverage its existing assets to optimize the chances of continuous innovation. In practice this means that you don’t expect a grocer to produce shoes or a fashion retailer to do research on chemicals. Each to their own. 

Similarly, Facebook’s core asset is the astounding engagement of its user base. From the perspective of building marketplaces, Facebook has no cost of customer acquisition (CAC). Its users keep coming back and that is an opportunity to promote more ads.

Facebook advertising cohort net revenue, Mark Tsirekas

This creates a virtuous flywheel. User A brings User B. Together they stay longer in the network and consume more ads which in turn help businesses and Facebook grow. 

There is a stark difference between the growth curve of the advertising business and Facebook’s. Whilst the business grows its cost and revenue somewhat proportionately, Facebook’s net revenue increases while its cost structure remains the same. In other words, Facebook’s profit margin from advertising increases without further effort. 

This is part of the Facebook magic. And so here lies the other question: 

When does it make sense to risk enraging your advertisers to pursue a new business line? 

Identity

When a user posts something in the marketplace, it is visible to all. Again, staying true to the flywheel logic this is perfectly sensible. Every post is another attempt to keep people on their screens. 

However with dating, Facebook had to break that link. The app is designed with privacy in mind and its marketing rhetoric revolves around that

Despite the marketing attempts, users will still feel wary of being exposed to a certain extent. After all, it’s their own identity. And since dating requires time and exposure, there should be doubts over long term user retention. Same goes for all activities which are deeply personal.

So, looking ahead what is Facebook’s marketplace endeavor going to look like?

The future of Facebook marketplaces 

Here’s what seems likely to happen then in the next 5 years and how nascent marketplaces should view the giant. 

  1. Facebook will invest in engineering driven services with high profitability to add value to its marketplaces (e.g. payments). 
  2. It won’t venture in categories where it would require an overhaul of mindset and cost structure (e.g. iBuying). 
  3. It is likely to launch further marketplaces in verticals with low set up costs and a strong human touch (e.g. recruitment) 
  4. Finally, for the attempts which will work we might see them to be separated from the core site/app and try to capture their own space (e.g Dating, Marketplace). 

Facebook will invest in payments & engineering driven solutions

Facebook will aim to capture the transaction in-network. Whether that is within the Facebook marketplace, through WhatsApp or as a tool via Facebook Pay the intent is clear: own payments when a transaction occurs.

This makes a lot of sense. Payments bode well with the general strategy of the business. Rely on technical implementation, have low marginal costs and keep the users in the network. 

Similar services: ID & verification, insurance underwriting, psychometric matching.

Won’t venture in new categories

Facebook is unlikely to go after innovations that require an overhaul in its structure and mindset. 

For Uber to scale, Uber partnered with maps, car manufacturers and even set up physical stores to serve their drivers’ queries. And Uber is still in deficit. 

Whilst Facebook could rely on individuals to create its own mobility network, immersing itself in the operational side of it seems unlikely.

Service based marketplaces

But it is likely that Facebook will not stop fighting for services. Should dating work, this will herald a new playbook for Facebook. One where it can monetize 1-to-1 relationships.

And in services there’s all that. Recruitment being a close relative to dating and a huge market. And given Facebook is already eyeing up work, similar experiments in job seeking seem sensible.

Facebook will spin off apps 

As Facebook tries to deal with the finite space it has to entrench itself as many more things than a social network in the mind of its users, it makes sense to spin off its successful apps to extend the real estate it owns within our smartphones. 

Consider this as an emancipation moment and a filtering process: 

Is an app established enough to stand and grow on its own? Spin it off

Is an app in need of the Facebook mothership? Position it in the middle of the users’ screen till it becomes a habit. 

What does this mean for vertical marketplaces? 

In the categories Facebook will venture into, marketplaces will face increased competition. This might not be felt immediately as the eCommerce market is growing but it will intensify the need for differentiation. 

I expect that more and more marketplaces will compete on the Experience layer of the transaction (delivery, fintech, services) which in turn implies a higher cost structure to start a marketplace. 

For the moment, this is ok since Venture Capital is at an all time high. From a cultural standpoint it becomes difficult to be an founder running an indie marketplace (like yours truly).

However it seems unlikely that Facebook, despite its unfair advantage, will become an unstoppable marketplace factory anytime soon and likely that consumers will reap the benefit of increased competition and corresponding innovation. 

Interesting times ahead. 

The tangible contribution of a strong brand to top line growth

Allocating budget and effort to brand awareness has always been a struggle for me. During my time at Timewith, I have witnessed firsthand the importance of a solid brand. It’s therapy, one of the human services where trust is the industry currency. But despite being so obvious, I was never able to articulate the exact function of brand to the marketing mix.

It does not take an MBA to understand that a strong brand is important. It’s not an exaggeration to say that sometimes a strong brand is everything. For FMCG this is true. Just a look at cleaning products should satisfy even the most deep-rooted doubts. Tesco’s antiseptic surface cleaner: £1/500ml. Dettol antibacterial cleaner: £1.75/500ml. We are talking about 75% difference for a product category that is arguably commoditized. That is crazy and what’s more, more people buy Dettol. The same trend exists across categories. Detergents, dishwasher tablets, food, candy. A strong brand brings about this elusive halo effect that can elevate a product or service to what was previously unimaginable.

But it’s not measurable

But here is an issue. How do you build and then how do you measure the importance of a brand? How does that correlate with your budget allocation?

See, for someone coming from an engineering and business background where “data is king” seeing ads on the tube, buses made me squirm for a while. “What a waste of money” I’d think.

At Timewith we recently expanded our product line with Assistant, a better way to manage one’s practice. While, I dislike the phrase and the positioning, Assistant could be classified as a practice management tool. Practice management is very different from therapy services because without search ads, it’s difficult to target clients at the right context i.e. identify purchase intent. And because practice management is a loyalty product, implying a high CLV and thus CPC and Google Ads are prohibitive.

So, we invested a lot on content marketing, community building and social media. I started seeing my LinkedIn following grow but I was still not clear on how this will convert, nor how to attribute value.

Understanding the value of a brand

But last week, I received a LinkedIn message that genuinely changed my world view. A therapist reached out to me directly to ask me some advice about her practice. We set up a call without really knowing how I could be of help and right off the bat she said:” I don’t know if you guys offer this, but I am interested in getting a better way to book my clients. I didn’t know who does that and immediately thought Timewith might have a solution for my practice! Do you guys offer anything like that?”

“Yes, we do”.

I felt the dots connecting for the first time. It was illuminating.

Brand awareness sole purpose is psychological priming. Priming occurs when a first thought or stimulus is tightly linked to a second thought. When we think “blue” , we might think “sea”. when we think “soft drink” we think Coca Cola. When we think “Michael Jordan”, we think Nike.

Two things are important here.

  • For my client “practice management” and Timewith were linked because of us posting on Social media insights, statistics and strategies for private practices.
  • Equally importantly, when it was time to look for a solution, instead of “thinking” from scratch or searching on Google she relied on her existing knowledge, and tried to think who’s “top of mind” and thought of Timewith. Why? It’s easier, and faster.

So if we combine and generalize the above two, we can come up with some conclusions.

  • What is the purpose of Brand awareness? To attach a strong link between a customer and an entity, function, product category.
  • What is the tangible result? Direct conversions. The customer will come and attempt to shop from the recognized brand before searching elsewhere.
  • What is the unique function of a brand in the marketing funnel? That it’s top of mind and trusted. Hence the user “does not need to think” and incur a cognitive load. In other words, the brand will not be compared.

Using Google Search to uncover brand priming

Yep, Nike is the only brand that comes as a recommended result when I type “basketball shoes”. Is it such a surprise? Isn’t Nike obviously a shoe company?

But it’s so much more than that. It’s about performance, sportsmanship, nice jerseys.

Tuns out there is a way to look at what are the most common associations of a brand. Simply type the name of the brand on the Google search bar and look at the recommended results. These are the things that people have linked strongly with the brand.

Again, no surprises here. Nike is undeniably linked with: Trainers, Basketball, Jordan and the Swoosh Logo.

Let’s go a level deeper. Let’s examine second level associations where the strategy takes off. What do I get if I type “Swoosh Logo”, the Nike Logo?

Suddenly the connections expand. It’s not about trainers anymore, which was the only product that Nike sells that came up in the first search. Suddenly the Nike brand is linked to trousers, hoodies, joggers, pants too.

In other words, priming can be passed on downstream. This explains why Nike wants to support top athletes. Because by supporting Michael Jordan it becomes the de facto brand in basketball, by supporting Tiger Woods, it is the brand for Golf and so on.

So a general framework emerges.

A brand makes sure to create a priming effect with concepts that are important to it e.g. celebrities and then let’s the value be created downstream from the associations that emerge.

And just like that, brand awareness becomes a tangible, budget worthy pursuit even for startups.