games

banggood 18% OFF Magic Cabin Hat Country LLC HearthSong 15% Off Your First Purchase! Code: WELCOME15 Stacy Adams

Friday, April 13, 2012

Facebook Offers: Yet Another Social Deals Attempt - PC Magazine

facebook - Google News
Google News
Facebook Offers: Yet Another Social Deals Attempt - PC Magazine
Apr 13th 2012, 20:51

Facebook Offers Mobile Deal

Facebook Deals died last year. So, uh, long live Facebook Offers?

Facebook quietly announced Facebook Offers on Thursday, publishing a YouTube video announcing the project (embedded below).

Facebook Offers is based on users "liking" the Facebook page owned by a business. If they do, Offers allows the business to send the customer/fan a special deal, such as a discount on a cup of coffee.

Facebook representatives could not be immediately reached for comment.

Unfortunately, Facebook's history of social deals reads like a bit like a "Who's on First" skit.

Facebook's plans for the social discounting space began auspiciously in November 2010, when the social network site launched its Deals platform, not only offering discounts for existing customers, but allowing Facebook users to search out nearby Deals via a mobile application. But in August 2011, Facebook killed its Places mobile application, then Deals.

Facebook Offers

In its place: check-in offers, which allowed users to "check in" to local businesses and receive discounts, followed by "Deals on Facebook," a trial program that launched in Atlanta, Austin, Dallas, San Diego, and San Francisco and focused on the best social activities in the area. Under "Deals on Facebook," users could get deals pushed to them via email, or else check out the "Deals" tab of the home page.

Both Facebook's "check-in offers" and "Deals on Facebook" are apparently still live. But the implementation of Facebook Offers is based solely on a customer's relationship with a business, and has nothing to do with location.

In fact, to activate the deal, the business must email the deal to an approved email address; a Facebook message won't suffice. Users then either need to print out the offer or open it on their mobile phone. There's no bar code or other dedicated app; users must hand their phone to the waiter or person behind the counter, who must be presumably briefed on the available offer to redeem it.

For more from Mark, follow him on Twitter @MarkHachman.

For the top stories in tech, follow us on Twitter at @PCMag.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters recommends: Donate to Wikileaks.

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

No comments:

Post a Comment