In a section titled "The Myth Of Social Media," Gallup reported that 62% of 18,000 Americans surveyed said ads on Facebook and Twitter do not influence the purchases they make.
Naturally, the study was not well received by Facebook, a company whose $10 billion-a-year
In a statement sent via e-mail yesterday afternoon, a Facebook spokesperson blasted Gallup's most recent survey, as well as the company's method of relying on what people voluntarily tell them to produce its reports.
Instead, the spokesperson said, brands should look at Facebook studies that have tracked how consumers actually behave after they see its ads.
"The only thing this poll shows is that self-reported behavioral data is unreliable. For decades, studies that look at people's actual, real-world behavior have shown that ads on all mediums, including social media, affect the things people buy," the spokesperson said.
"The most successful marketers in the world don't just take our word for it when it comes to ad effectiveness, they've asked us to prove that our ads work. And we have. Those marketers hold us to a very high standard; we look at actual changes in attitudes and behaviors using experimental design - the same approach used in medical trials."