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January 8, 2009 11:45 AM PST

What Facebook should have learned from religion

by Chris Matyszczyk

When I was little, my parents used to drag me along to a Catholic Church so that I could spiritually contemplate my day of rest.

While there was no way I could question that I would go to hell if I used a vile word like "bloody" or "damn," there was one element of the Sunday service that always seemed odd: the collection plate.

My dad explained to me that we should always give some of what we earned to the Church. It was only many years later that I saw that the priest lived in a far nicer house than ours.

These days, I have no time to go to church because, of course, I need to catch up with my friends online every Sunday. Yet the notion of the collection plate still lingers.

What would Facebook be like today, if it had insisted on a collection plate from the very beginning? One of the great concerns that many of the wisest advertisers have is that Facebook simply doesn't feel right as an advertising medium.

As Procter & Gamble's general manager of interactive marketing and innovation, Ted McConnell, put it at a Digital Media conference in Cincinnati: "I really don't want to buy any more banner ads on Facebook...I have a reaction to (Facebook) as a consumer advocate and an advertiser: what in heaven's name made you think you could monetize the real estate in which somebody is breaking up with (his) girlfriend?"

Yet churches have managed to monetize the real estate in which you pray for a raise, for your own salvation, for a cure for cancer, and for yet another Wild Card team to win the Super Bowl.

How did they do it? Perhaps by never being too idealistic in the first place. Churches were, and often still are, the primary social-networking places for many.

Vanity Fair's brilliant story about a man who claimed to be Clark Rockefeller, but was really someone far more sinister, revealed that he often sealed his deals with the well-heeled by meeting them in churches.

One might also argue that churches have better ads than Facebook too.

(Credit: CC Au Tiger 01)

Yet for all their supposed celestial idealism, churches have always maintained a healthy understanding about money and the material world. So much so that when television came along, we were suddenly soothed by the vision of Oral Roberts and other preachers who used the visual medium to enrich their mission. (Can you believe that QVC was founded as late as 1986?)

Perhaps the founders of Facebook were too enamored of the social-networking movement they were creating to ever think hard enough about money. Perhaps they felt that in creating this movement, issues of money were not merely irrelevant or at best secondary, but a little too dirty--a little too '80s.

Now Mark Zuckerberg is acting as if Facebook is the world's next great new medium, touting its 150 million user base.

But as Ted McConnell suggested: "Who said this is media? Media is something you can buy and sell. Media contains inventory. Media contains blank spaces. Consumers weren't trying to generate media. They were trying to talk to somebody. So it just seems a bit arrogant...We hijack their own conversations, their own thoughts and feelings, and try to monetize it."

As Wikipedia asks for donations, as pornographers try to get themselves a bailout, churches of all denominations sit there quietly, gaze upon their chastened flocks, and continue to be a home for social networking.

I wonder if Mark Zuckerberg wishes today that he'd had a collection plate from the very beginning. It might have saved him from becoming an adman.

(Disclosure: Yes, I've been responsible for Procter & Gamble advertising in the past. No, I don't know Ted McConnell. No, I am not a church member. No, not even the Church of Scientology.)

Chris Matyszczyk is an award-winning creative director who advises major corporations on content creation and marketing. He brings an irreverent, sarcastic, and sometimes ironic voice to the tech world. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (11 Comments)
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by Guylene1 January 8, 2009 1:37 PM PST
A very intelligent and accurate article. Unfortunately, too few people will read it and even less will understand it. I have always believed in the importance of the fundamental concept (or premise) that initially drives a project and the almost impossible task of adjusting that original premise to accommodate a later market or business necessity.
Reply to this comment
by ChrisMatyszczyk January 8, 2009 7:12 PM PST
If only you'd been working at the New York Times when they first went online, Guylene1, you might have been able to help them.

Thank you for your kind words.

Chris
by ronpadz January 8, 2009 1:47 PM PST
I think most of us would be willing to pay a nominal fee of $1 per month to be a Facebook member if it meant no advertising. It could easily be a 2-3 billion dollar business by the end of 2009 with unfathomable margins. Not too shabby for a 24 year old.
Reply to this comment
by ChrisMatyszczyk January 8, 2009 7:15 PM PST
Ronpadz,

Yes, indeed. Will Facebook make $150 million from ads this year. What do you think?

Chris
by t8 January 9, 2009 2:50 AM PST
What is missing is an easy micro-payment system on the Net. Mobile phones are the obvious device to do it.
by spiffy1001 January 8, 2009 2:09 PM PST
The problem is God never asked us to give 10% of our income to a website.
Reply to this comment
by caffemacchiato January 8, 2009 6:08 PM PST
How many services on the net are actually 'free'. And how many paid services on the net actually survived?
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by johntruong--2008 January 9, 2009 4:53 AM PST
Facebook with a collection plate right from the start is Classmates.com. I've always believed that Classmates could have been a Facebook if only it were a little less greedy. That site gives you nothing of value unless you pay monthly fees for it and the spam is excessive.
Reply to this comment
by Penguinisto January 9, 2009 6:34 AM PST
While we disagree on what the collection plate at church is for (I doubt that Facebook --or most other websites-- would use the majority of the proceeds to run local charitable programs), I like the allegory.

That said, take a peek at Wikipedia. Also, lot of application freeware sites do the same thing with a little PayPal donation button, and have had them for almost as long as PayPal has existed. There are already sites that offer ad-free content (like Salon.com) for a small periodic premium. It's completely voluntary, and doesn't intrude into the basic services that the site offers... so while yes you're the first I've seen to make the collection plate analogy, it's not exactly a new idea. ;)

/P
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by imrational January 9, 2009 8:41 AM PST
What facebook should have learned from churches?

You mean like stapling innocent people to trees to pay for the mistakes of others is a good thing?
Reply to this comment
by Dalkorian January 12, 2009 2:47 PM PST
No, he said it in the article. He means like milking the populace out of their hard earned dollars so the preacher can live in luxury is a good thing.

Stapling innocent people to trees is just fun.

(Sorry folks, couldn't help myself. Trying to be ridiculous here to match the tenor of the comment I'm responding to. Aw who am I kidding - I know I offended a few folks but I really don't care. Some things they do offend me too. Therefore I shouldn't be apologizing and I'm sorry for that. Yeah, I apologized for apologizing. Feel better?;))
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About Technically Incorrect

Chris Matyszczyk brings a fresh and irreverent perspective to the tech world in his CNET blog, Technically Incorrect. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.

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