How does this relate at all to personal finance, it doesn't really unless you are the exceedingly lucky 20 something who stands to make scads of money if the site is sold. However, it made me think of a college roommate who used FaceBook as a fairly lucrative side business requiring next to no work. While it was a racket that paid off for him, I wonder how many other people have tried similar things.*
1) My roommate would create an account with one of the freeipod, freexbox, freewhatever websites there are hundreds of them.
2) He would create a short URL to forward to his freewhatever referral page.
3) He would create an ad linking to that short url on FaceBook and run the ad at large institutions where he could get good exposure.**
4) Referrals would sign up through his like and for a fraction of the product price paid to FaceBook in ads he would have a brand new xbox, ipod or other gadget in a few months.***
* I DO NOT ENDORSE MULTI-LEVEL MARKETING PROGRAMS OR ANY OF THESE MLM SITES, actually I don't endorse facebook for that matter either, it is the college student equivalent of crack.
**Previously FaceBook sold ads for a flat rate per school per day say $10 for 11,000 pageviews, now the site charges $5 for "fliers" which produce 2,500 views a day so I'm not sure if this method makes sense on FaceBook anymore but I would guess it could be applied to other websites with similar business models hitting the same demographics.
*** I can't imagine many of these websites have