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Facebook's push to help raise money for charity could indirectly give it a $10 billion boost to its business

Apr 7, 2019, 19:00 IST

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg leaves the EU Parliament in Brussels on Tuesday, May 22, 2018.AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert

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  • Facebook's charitable giving tools could help boost revenues from its push into shopping on Instagram.
  • The tool encourages users to enter their credit card details into the app, and will help build payments expertise at the company.
  • Analysts from Deutsche Bank predict that Instagram shopping will generate $10 billion in revenue in 2021.

Facebook's charitable giving tools have generated more than a billion dollars in donations for non-profit, the company announced in November 2018. It's an impressive sum - and it could, indirectly, help make Facebook make billions of dollars in new revenue in the long run too.

Earlier this week, analysts at Deutsche Bank published a research note looking at Instagram's big push into e-commerce. The Facebook-owned photo-sharing app is attempting to encourage online shopping on its platform with buy buttons and other tools, and the investment bank estimates that it could drive $10 billion of additional revenue for the company in 2021, 10% of what it predicts the company's total advertising revenues will be that year. In other words, a very significant chunk of money - even by Facebook's very high standards.

And Facebook's charitable giving tools, which encourage users to start donation drives for causes of their choice on their birthday, could help encourage that growth.

"One ad partner we spoke to noted that Facebook was likely seeing a nice increase in payment adoption driven by increasing use of birthday charity fundraiser on the core [Facebook] platform," the Deutsche Bank analysts wrote. "As such, in addition to using the platform for charitable purposes, Facebook stands to build up its roster of payment-enabled users on the platform that can ultimately be leveraged into shopping functionality over time."

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In other words, by encouraging Facebook users to enter their banking details into the apps for worthy purposes, it means it's more likely they'll then buy things from on Instagram down the line.

Analyst Lloyd Walmsley added in an email to Business Insider: "The birthday campaigns are driving users to enter credit card data into Facebook's payments area which can then ultimately be used for other things on FB, e.g. shopping transactions."

There are other, related benefits to Facebook's charitable giving efforts for Instagram shopping, too.

It will help build up the company's experience working with online payments and financial infrastructure, hiring and training skilled workers who might be re-tasked to more revenue-generating activities down the line. And on a more basic level, it helps acclimatize users to the very act of paying for things on an app owned by Facebook - a service that has long prided itself on being completely free, no payments required.

As such, Facebook's charitable donation work acts as a kind of Trojan horse for the company - driving goodwill in the short term, and helping unlock ever-larger profits in years to come.

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