Is Facebook Growing Too Fast For Its Own Good?
Wednesday, November 5th, 2008According to TechCrunch, Facebook may become a victim of its own success. With a 118 percent in growth in unique million visitors - from 74 million unique visitors per month a year ago to 161 million uniques per month now (according to comScore) - the company is still not profitable. Which means it may need a substantial cash injection sooner rather than later to continue.
TechCrunch reports that with 750 employees and an estimated $10 million monthly payroll, along with $1 million per month for electricity, $500,000 per month for bandwidth, up to $2 million for each NetApp 3070 storage system it’s buying on a weekly basis, $15 million per year in office and data center rent payments, and $100 million earmarked for 50,000 servers… it all adds up to annual expenses of $200 million or more.
And while Facebook’s 2008 estimated revenue is $265 million, the company is still losing money at current revenues, with no assurance that revenue growth will meet or exceed the growth in costs.
Writes Michael Arrington:
“If revenues don’t grow substantially, the company’s runway of cash gets much shorter. 2008 revenues are likely $100 million less than the company anticipated a year ago. If the economic train really derails, Facebook could be in big trouble.”
If Facebook has spent most of the $500 million it has raised to date… and revenues don’t substantially increase… the company will need further funding. Which, according to Michael Arrington, it should grab as soon as possible.

