In the rush to compare advertising engagement levels between Twitter and Facebook last week, TBG Digital made a hasty and significant error. The social media marketing vendor originally reported that Facebook mobile ads outperformed Twitter by at least four times, but days later it reversed its finding, admitting that it was "not comparing like for like."
However, the end result still doesn't carry much weight for brands. If Promoted Accounts and Newsfeed ads are akin to comparing apples to elephants, Promoted Tweets and Newsfeed ads are like apples and oranges. Neither of those directly compare, so advertisers learn little in the process.
Based on those misleading comparisons, TBG Digital drew the wrong conclusions. Facebook isn't beating Twitter on mobile ad engagement. Indeed, it appears to be doing quite the opposite.
"With Promoted Tweets, we've seen engagement rates from 1 to 3 percent on average. On mobile, the engagement rates are even higher," said Twitter spokeswoman Carolyn Penner. Mobile Newsfeed ads on Facebook garnered a 1.14 percent CTR on average, according to TBG Digital.
Twitter declined to provide the engagement rates it's generating on mobile, but it has a much narrower gap between CTRs on desktop and mobile than Facebook. Facebook's mobile ads outperform desktop ads in CTRs and CPMs by about 14 times, according to TBG Digital.
More than half of Twitter's and Facebook's active users access the sites via mobile. While Twitter has been entrenched in mobile from its early days, Facebook is playing catch up as it looks to improve its performance disparity between desktop and mobile.
The company seems to have taken the well-publicized concerns about its mobile strategy to heart. It has made a number of major acquisitions in mobile over the past few months, including Facebook's colossal $1 billion Instagram purchase in April. Last month, it announced plans to expand advertising on its mobile app, giving marketers the ability to buy mobile ads separately for the first time.
Meanwhile, Twitter recently gave advertisers the ability to target a Promoted Tweet to a certain subsets of users.

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