P&G unimpressed by targeted Facebook advertising

By Lucy Whitehouse

- Last updated on GMT

P&G unimpressed by targeted Facebook advertising

Related tags Marketing Advertising

Global personal care player Procter & Gamble has voiced its dissatisfaction with the reach of targeted Facebook advertising, and has said it intends to redistribute its spending on the platform.

Speaking to The Wall Street Journal​, the company’s chief marketing officer Marc Pritchard explained that its attempt to very narrowly target its ads on the social media platform had not seen enough return.

We targeted too much, and we went too narrow​,” he said in an interview.“Now we’re looking at: What is the best way to get the most reach but also the right precision?​”

Questions for Facebook

P&G’s move, coming from the biggest advertising spender in the world (its 2015 budget came in at a reported USD 7.2bn), is a decisive one.

It suggests that Facebook may have to reconsider its ad business, which relies on the premise that the more targeted an ad is, the more valuable it is to brands - the opposite of how P&G describes its recent experience.

As Sharon Terlep and Deepa Seetharaman write in the WSJ, “P&G could be the bellwether on how consumer goods companies and big brands use digital advertising.

“Over the past year, some marketers, specifically consumer product companies, have discovered they need to go ‘much more broad’ with their advertising on social media sites such as Facebook.”

Beauty: be ‘less interruptive’

L’Oréal’s chief digital officer Lubomira Rochet recently spoke of the need to create branded experiences rather than traditional adverts when marketing beauty brands online.

Speaking to the Financial Times, the beauty industry expert said diversifying a brand’s digital offering is increasingly crucial to keeping consumers engaged.

“This is really about creating greater content and experiences, greater formats for our consumers — especially in an age where ad-blocking is going mainstream,”​ she said.

The whole thing that ad-blocking is pointing to is classical advertising fatigue,”​ she continued. “We need to reinvent the experience and we need to make it less interruptive, more immersive, more rewarding, more personalised.”

Related topics Market Trends Skin Care Hair Care

Related news

Related products

show more

Collagen Reimagined, Discover Biodesigned Type XXI

Collagen Reimagined, Discover Biodesigned Type XXI

Content provided by Geltor | 20-Mar-2024 | Product Brochure

Collagen is the body’s most abundant protein and a mainstream ingredient for beauty. Type XXI collagen transcends a common protein into a powerful bioactive

Empowering natural barrier function for future-proof skin

Empowering natural barrier function for future-proof skin

Content provided by Lucas Meyer Cosmetics | 14-Mar-2024 | White Paper

Corneopeptyl™ is a new patented peptide biomimetic to the LCE6A protein, obtained by green chemistry-based synthesis. By mimicking the LCE6A protein activity,...

Get your skin ready for summer

Get your skin ready for summer

Content provided by Robertet Health & Beauty | 27-Jun-2023 | Product Brochure

Sunbathing at the beach is the first UV-related skin damage that comes to mind. Whereas, enjoying a coffee on a terrace under the sun can be as harmful.

Related suppliers

Follow us

Products

View more

Podcast

Beauty 4.0 Podcast