Quick explanation for those not familiar with Facebook Connect. It is a service developed by Facebook that lets Facebook users login into partner sites using their Facebook account and share information with Facebook friends. Basically, a single sign-on authentication solution that websites can use instead of relying on building it for themselves.
Facebook Connect – Current State of the Union

As of this writing, there are more than 15,000 registered implementations (websites, devices and applications) of Facebook Connect since its general availability in December 2008. According to Nick O’Neil from Allfacebook.com, the most recent statistics show that Facebook Connect is close to 1 million users. Impressive numbers given this initiative isn’t even a year old yet. Implementing this can be trivial, and offers immediate benefits to companies willing to experiment. Already we’re seeing these benefits on Connect enabled sites:
Increased Registration - Data from Facebook states that sites that use Facebook Conect as an alternate to account registration have seen a 30-300% increase in registration on their sites.
- Citysearch.com – Daily site registrations have tripled in the 4 months since Facebook Connect testing began
- Huffingtonpost.com – Since integrating with Facebook Connect, more than 33% of their new commentor registrations come through Facebook
- Cbsinsider.com – Over 85% of all new user registrations are coming from Facebook Connect
Increased Site Traffic - After implementation, Facebook.com immediately begins sending web site traffic your way. Data from Facebook says that for each story published in Facebook, companies see roughly 3 clicks back to the site. Nearly half the stories in the News Stream get clicked on. This creates opportunities for the site to encourage more user actions – knowing that each one may result in 3 new visits to their site.
- Lollapalooza.com – Pageviews are up 99 percent, page views per visit are up 34 percent, and the average time on the site is up 20 percent since Facebook Connect implementation
- Surfline.com – July referrals increased 57%, and 38% over the 2009 monthly average (Facebook Connect wasn’t even implemented until July 27th – The means they saw the benefits from just 4 days worth of traffic, not the entire month). August is already off to a great start, with trending at an 83% increase month-over-month, and 148% over the 2009 average
Increased Engagement – Facebook users are used to being social. They are an active group, participating, sharing, and generating more content. Sites with Facebook Connect see a 15-100% increase in reviews. Connected users create 15-60% more content than users who have not connected with Facebook Connect.
- Urbanspoon - 43,000 new users have connected using Facebook Connect. Those users have voted 150,000 times on restaurants , left 22,000 reviews, and uploaded 13,000 photos
- CitySearch - 94% of users who write reviews on the site share those reviews back on Facebook, where 70% of their friends who see the review click on it, and travel back to Citysearch.com
Improved User Experience - Facebook Connect offers users qualitative benefits too. No new site registration is required, simply login using your Facebook credentials. It also makes it easy to share with an existing network of friends or family by publishing activities to the Facebook Newsfeed, with only a couple clicks of the mouse. No typing or emailing required. Given the sheer size of Facebook’s active user base, this type of integration with an individual’s personal network could ultimately become the new “email a friend” feature found on websites worldwide.
Access to 250 million Online Consumers – At the end of the day, companies need to fish where the fish are. And right now, the fish are spending their time on Facebook.com (5 billion minutes a day globally). Opening up a direct pathway from your site to Facebook gives you access, albeit indirectly through your user’s activities, to an entirely new set of people. And for practically no out of pocket cost.
Bonus Round:
Facebook Connect Innovation – Companies that are willing to take on some additional time and effort for more advanced implementations of Facebook Connect are moving beyond the basic benefits above. Sites like the HuffingtonPost are innovating and creating new uses, like HuffPost Social News. This initiative goes beyond allowing users to login using Facebook, and instead mashes up HuffPost news content with the conversation surrounding it, attempting to create a digital water cooler like environment and feel. The intent and prevailing logic is that it will increase engagement and social participation. Based on the results from the other examples above, HuffPost stands a good chance at doing just that.
Increase Revenue – Some e-Retailers have taken notice of Facebook Connect and are beginning to formulate plans for implementing it, while other more progressive companies already have it live (retailers like Jansport and Teavana). According to a report from the WSJ, Jay Allen, Teavana’s vice president of e-commerce, says the conversion rate—a measure of how many shoppers make purchases—for people who use the application is 20% higher than the rate for others, and their average orders are slightly more expensive. Other e-Retailers that have announced plans to integrate with Facebook Connect are Dicks Sporting Goods, Drugstore.com and eMusic.com.
Key Takeaway: Facebook Connect offers immediate benefits to both website visitors and the companies that operate them. Tapping into existing social behavior is the next logical step to brand website & social media integration. Companies should take advantage of the benefits Facebook offers, as they are also immediate (see Surfline example above) and substantial.
Resources: Allfacebook.com has a good directory of some Facebook Connect installations. The most recent and up to date data, news, and examples can be found on the official Facebook Connect News page.
And if you want watch it in action before trying it yourself, check out the Video Overview of Facebook Connect courtesy of Powered Inc.

