Facebook’s testing another ad-free Pages design for desktop

Facebook is testing a new look for of its desktop Pages that drops right-hand ads and repositions the page’s cover photo, profile photo and navigation bar.




Facebook’s testing another ad-free Pages design for desktop

The trend of ad-free Facebook Pages continues.


Facebook has started testing another redesign of its desktop Pages that omits the ads that normally appear on the right-hand side of the page. A reader tipped us off to the new look, and a Facebook spokesperson confirmed that this is one of the ad-free layouts the company is trying out, in addition to the one we reported on last month.


Here are a couple examples of what the latest layout being tested looks like:


Facebook’s testing another ad-free Pages design for desktop

 

 Facebook’s testing another ad-free Pages design for desktop

Based on the two experimental layouts, Facebook seems to have four ideas in mind of how it wants to change the current look of its desktop Pages: separate the profile photo from the cover photo, move the navigation menu to the left side of the page, move the page information boxes to the right side and remove the right-side ads altogether.


The seeming inevitability of Facebook removing ads from its desktop Pages may not be that big of a deal. For starters, even if Facebook does pull them from desktop Pages doesn’t mean it’ll pull them from its desktop homepage or people’s profile pages. And ads on its desktop Pages may not bring in enough money to justify them crowding the page when Facebook might prefer to free up that room to make Pages even more of a hub for businesses, publishers and celebrities, as it’s doing with the mobile version of Pages.


Facebook’s desktop ad business remains a significant, if small, revenue stream, and the right-hand ads are the smallest part of that supplementary stream. In the first quarter of 2016, 18% of Facebook’s overall ad revenue came from its desktop ads. But Facebook is serving up fewer desktop ad impressions than it used to, and the likely majority of the ones it is serving are news feed ads, the company’s cross-device cash cow that rakes in more money per ad than the seemingly endangered desktop-only right-hand ads.












 


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