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State Dept. Bureau Spent $630k On Facebook 'Likes'

schwit1 writes with this excerpt from the Washington Examiner: "State Department officials spent $630,000 to get more Facebook 'likes,' prompting employees to complain to a government watchdog that the bureau was 'buying fans' in social media, the agency's inspector general says. 'Many in the bureau criticize the advertising campaigns as "buying fans" who may have once clicked on an ad or "liked" a photo but have no real interest in the topic and have never engaged further,' the inspector general reported. The effort failed to reach the bureau's target audience, which is largely older and more influential than the people liking its pages. Only about 2 percent of fans actually engage with the pages by liking, sharing or commenting. In September 2012 Facebook also changed its approach to users' news feeds, and the expensive 'fan' campaigns became much less valuable. The bureau now must constantly pay for sponsored ads to keep its content visible even to people who have already liked its pages."

4 of 99 comments (clear)

  1. not exactly a lot of money by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The state department's budget is about $50 billion annually. There is probably some waste in there, but shaving off $630k in Facebook marketing is not a very promising place to start (that'd be a savings of 0.00126%!).

    Besides which, various PR nonsense is a big part of what the state department does; it's sort of the marketing/sales department of the U.S. government.

    1. Re:not exactly a lot of money by Le+Marteau · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's more than just the monetary cost. It's a morality issue.

      Is it moral to take, under threat of jail, funds from anyone, no matter how small, to pay for Facebook likes?

      Our government is immoral. Cases such as this serve to highlight it.

      Apologist for our immoral government will continue to say, "oh, what's a million dollars here or there" not realizing or denying how obscene their position actually is.

      --
      Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
  2. Re:We need another Egypt... by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When thinking of good models to emulate, are you thinking more of Egypt Revolution 1.0, which got taken over by the Muslim Brotherhood, or of Egypt Revolution 2.0, which got taken over by the military?

  3. Re:not exactly a lot of money? by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect it's the people pushing this kind of populist story who fall into category (b). Let's say we have a $50 billion agency, and think it should save money. We could:

    Option 1. Start by looking at the major expenses, and find some that can be cut down. Let's define "major expenses" here generously as anything that takes at least 1% of the State Department's budget. Are those all necessary? Can some of them, even if necessary, be done with less? Make these the main targets of your anti-waste campaign.

    Option 2. Pick something down in the noise, under 0.01% of the budget. But find something that makes for a good evening-news scandal. Something populist having to do with the price of toilet seats, or Facebook, or something else that you can explain in under 10 seconds to idiots. Make this the main target of your "anti-waste" campaign.

    The main difference is that Option 1 may actually save money, while Option 2 is just political grandstanding.

    See also: idiots who think arguing over PBS funding is going to balance the federal budget.