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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

fb says Asia is fasted-growing market

SINGAPORE — Asia is the fastest-growing region for new subscribers to social networking site Facebook despite restrictions on access in China, a senior company executive said on Tuesday.
Speaking at the opening of Facebook's first Asian sales office in Singapore, vice-president Blake Chandlee said its growth in the region was outpacing the rest of the world.
Facebook currently claims more than 500 million registered users worldwide, with 54 percent said to be logging on to the site daily.
Chandlee, the commercial director for regions outside North America and western Europe, declined to give regional or country user breakdowns except for Singapore, which has nearly three million users out of a population of five million.
"At the regional level, if you look at the big four, what we call, theatres, you've got North America, you've got EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa) you've got Asia, you've got Latin America," Chandlee said.
"Asia is definitely the fastest-growing amongst those big theatres... Asia's got some of the fastest-growing countries in it, certainly," said Chandlee, who described Facebook's growth in India as "tremendous".
China restricted access to the site in July 2009 amid deadly ethnic unrest in the restive far-western region of Xinjiang, but users have found ways of breaching the censorship wall.
Facebook set up an Asian sales office in Singapore to help regional brands in executing their marketing campaigns on the platform, Chandlee said.
"The Asian market's a very, very big market for us." he said. "It's an enormous opportunity for us."
"Singapore has been a great market. We nearly have three million people in Singapore alone, which means having a huge percentage of the total population on Facebook," he stated.
"We see that across the region really, we're pretty excited about it," he said.
Founded in 2004 and based in Palo Alto, California, Facebook does not publish financial results but research firm eMarketer said last month it should rake in more than one billion dollars in advertising revenue this year

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