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Facebook finds more miscalculated metrics, but many retailers dont care

Facebook Inc. today acknowledged that it miscalculated several metrics it has been sharing with retailers and other marketers. The announcement comes less than two months after the social network disclosed it had been giving marketers an inflated number for the average time spent viewing online videos.

Facebook also says it has developed an internal review process to ensure its metrics are clear and up to date, while also rolling out more relationships with independent companies to monitor its metrics to quell marketers’ concerns about the social network’s data.

The social network says it uncovered the issues after undergoing a comprehensive internal metrics audit and that none of the metrics in question affected the way Facebook calculates how it charges for advertising.

Among the measures Facebook says it misrepresented are:

Despite Facebook’s issues, some retailers say they aren’t concerned about the misreporting because the affected metrics aren’t ones they use to determine their social marketing spending.

“We researched the detail and it’s of limited consequence to us as a partner,” says Billy May, senior vice president, marketing, direct-to-consumer and corporate development at Abercrombie & Fitch Co., No. 58 in the Internet Retailer 2016 Top 500 Guide. He notes that larger advertisers, such as consumer packaged goods or manufacturers or automotive brands, might have experienced a larger impact.

Similarly, Eoin Comerford, CEO of Moosejaw (No. 273), doesn’t expect to change the way the outdoor goods retailer approaches Facebook as a result of the disclosure.

“Regardless of the reach metrics, [Facebook] has never really driven much by way of actual revenue so it has remained a rather minor channel for us, accounting for less than 1% of our marketing spend,” he says. Of course, that puts Moosejaw in the minority of retailers. After all, Forrester Research Inc.’s report “The State of Retailing Online 2016: Marketing and Merchandising” found that 68% of respondents said Facebook ads increased sales and that 71% of retailers said they boosted their spending on Facebook this year.

Even so, Facebook’s disclosure is a sign that retailers need to be critical about the metrics they use to evaluate their marketing channels, says Dayle Hall, vice president of marketing at Lithium Technologies. “This is a world where you have to rely as much on your own knowledge and data as the vendor’s analytics, and the recent news that Facebook’s reporting was incorrect bears this out,” he says.

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