*By Conor White* After losing $136 billion in market cap in less than a week, Facebook is looking for ways to reinvigorate its outlook at a time of slowing ad revenue growth, [continued fallout](https://cheddar.com/videos/facebook-stock-crushed-after-disappointing-earnings) from the Cambridge Analytical data privacy scandal, and the [latest revelation](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/31/us/politics/facebook-political-campaign-midterms.html) Tuesday that it's detected attempts to influence this November's midterm elections. "It's been a long 2018 for Facebook," said Madison Malone Kircher, an associate editor at New York Magazine. "Which brings us to the one thing Facebook is doing right, and that's the Stories platform. It works really well on Instagram, which Facebook owns, and they've really been trying to push to make it work on Facebook." Instagram Stories has 400 million daily users, double the number of users of rival Snapchat, and Facebook has been trying to lure advertisers to the Stories platform. Kircher said in an interview Tuesday with Cheddar that neither of the social media companies has figured out how to make user-generated stories on their platforms profitable. "Snapchat, which is the creator of this style of posting, has also struggled with it," Kircher said. "They rolled out a new platform called 'Commercials' this week, which is similarly trying to figure out how to sell ads against this style of content." In the end, Kircher said Facebook can push Stories to advertisers all it wants, but it won't be successful until it's popular with users. "It's a two-fold problem Facebook has," Kircher said. "One, trying to convince advertisers to buy ads in this space, but first they have to figure out how to get us to use it." For more on this story, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/facebook-pushing-stories-feature-to-advertisers).

Share:
More In Technology
Opening Bell: October 31, 2018
The markets looked to recover losses for October in the last day of trading for the month. Facebook shares were making solid gains on the heels of its third-quarter earnings results. Revenue slowed but the company beat estimates on earnings per share. Plus, Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, an Ecuadorian immigrant running to represent Florida's 26th district, tells Cheddar the changes she would make if elected to office. The midterms are just six days out.
Online TV Streamer Locast Has an Ambitious Plan to Help Broadcasters
In the fight to save broadcast from cord cutters and big tech, television streamer Locast has an ambitious plan: increase and improve the data available to traditional broadcasters. "What I'd like to be able to do is help broadcasters with their advertising, reaching the audiences that are online," Locast's chairman David Goodfriend told Cheddar Wednesday.
Augmented Reality Will Change Marketing as We Know It
Deloitte Digital CMO Alicia Hatch told Cheddar that the exploding adoption of mobile devices will drive consumers to embrace the value of AR in more of their everyday lives. "We've been in a mobile world for a while, but the number of devices, and the ubiquity of them, will allow us to have fewer barriers to entry to actually be using AR and have it threaded through our lives."
Casper Takes on 'Big Mattress' With More Brick-and-Mortar Locations
Known for disrupting the "Big Mattress" industry as one of the original digitally native, direct-to-consumer brands, Casper is set to open 200 new brick-and-mortar locations around the world. It's part of what CMO Jeff Brooks says is a strategy to meet the consumer wherever they are, on their terms. (And it helps the company stand out in a crowded marketplace, too.)
Apple Shows Some Much-Needed Love to Neglected Product Lines
Apple showed some love to the MacBook Air and Mac Mini Tuesday. Reports ahead of the event anticipated the announcements, but that didn’t leave the crowd — made up of Apple employees, guests, partners, and media — any less enthused when C.E.O. Tim Cook and team finally got on stage. Cheddar's Hope King was in Brooklyn for the unveiling.
Canada Faces Weed Shortage Two Weeks After Legalization
It's been nearly two weeks since Canada opened the retail market for recreational marijuana, and now it faces a shortage of supply across many of the retail operations in a number of provinces. "Given the robustness of the demand, suppliers clearly did have challenges getting the stores full and adequately supplied," Cowen Managing Director Vivien Azer told Cheddar's CannaBiz Tuesday.
Load More