Here’s How Facebook Responded to the Backlash Over Its Ad Metrics

A woman watches a Facebook promotional v
A woman watches a Facebook promotional video ahead of the company's IPO, in Washington on May 8, 2012. Facebook, already assured of becoming one of the most valuable US firms when it goes public later this month, now must convince investors in the next two weeks that it is worth all the hype. Top executives at the world's leading social network have kicked off their all-important road show on Wall Street -- an intense marketing drive ahead of the company's expected trading launch on the tech-heavy Nasdaq on May 18. AFP PHOTO/Mladen ANTONOV (Photo credit should read MLADEN ANTONOV/AFP/GettyImages)
Mladen Antonov — AFP/GettyImages

Facebook on Friday apologized for an error in the way it measured a key metric of video viewership that significantly amplified users’ viewing times on its platform.

The social media giant had said a few weeks ago that a metric for average user time on videos was artificially inflated as it only counted videos viewed for over three seconds.

At the time, Facebook had said that the “discrepancy” did not impact advertising billings and introduced newer metrics to replace the previous method.

Facebook (FB) has made a significant strides into video, which has attracted significant advertising interest and has benefited from the shift in advertising spending towards the Internet and other mobile platforms.

Revenue from advertising was the biggest driver to company’s total revenue in the latest quarter, surging 63% to $6.24 billion.

“While this is only one of the many metrics marketers look at, we take any mistake seriously,” David Fischer, vice president of business and marketing partnership at Facebook, said in a post on Friday.

“This could pose a serious blow to Facebook’s video proposition, which has had so much of momentum over the last two years,” said Sarah Wood, co-CEO of ad tech company Unruly, which is owned by News Corp [fortune-stock symbol="nws"].

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The news was first reported by the Wall Street Journal on Thursday.

Publicis Groupe SA’s advertising unit was informed by Facebook that the earlier method likely overestimated average time spent watching videos by between 60% and 80%, according to the WSJ report.

Shares of Facebook closed down 1.6% at $127.96 on Friday.

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