In Mobile Push, Facebook Buys Parse to Court App DevelopersFacebook's $85 million acquisition, Tumblr's new mobile ads, Zach Braff's Kickstarter project and more social-media news.

ByBrian Patrick Eha

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

This week's need-to-know social-media news.

With 680 million monthly active mobile users last year, Facebook is taking its mobile strategy up a notch. The social networking giant has acquired Parse, a startup that offers tools to support app developers.

The deal, reportedly worth $85 million, is one way for Facebook to appeal to mobile app developers and create a new source of revenue. Parse offers services that help app developers store data in the cloud, manage identity log-ins and push notifications. Thanks to Parse, Facebook will now be able to sell cloud data storage and other back-end services to developers, while also adding the ability to integrate sharing and buy ads.

What's more, the social network will gain access to Parse's client base -- reportedly around 60,000 developers. "This fills out one of the pillars of Facebook platform that we've been thinking about for a while," Douglas Purdy, Facebook's director of product management, said in an interview with TechCrunch. "Since 2007, the Facebook platform has been about being an identity mechanism with sharing. But over the course of the last six months, we've been thinking about how we can help applications get discovered and how they can be monetized."--TechCrunchandTechCrunch

Tumblr places ads in its mobile apps.
Starting this week, users of Tumblr's iPhone and Android apps started seeing advertisements on the popular social network. The ads appear in a users' dashboard stream, so they are unavoidable as you scroll through the latest posts from blogs you're following. The mobile ad placement, which comes about a year after Tumblr first began selling ads, is a bid to leverage the network's massive user base and move toward profitability.--CNET

Salesforce creates social media dashboard for marketers.
Customer relationship management (CRM) and cloud computing company Salesforce has launched Social.com, the first tool that allows marketers to monitor the social conversation in real time and serve up ads on trending topics. From the new platform, advertisers can place ads on Facebook and Twitter and create social-media campaigns. Social.com is part of the Salesforce Marketing Cloud that also includes Radian6's social listening tools and Buddy Media's social publishing and analytics apps.--SocialTimes

Zach Braff's Kickstarter project gains steam.
Following the runaway success of theKickstarter campaign to create a Veronica Mars编剧兼导演和电影,花园Scrubs star Zach Braff has launched aKickstarter projectof his own. Braff is raising money to finance an independent film that he will direct and star in, and whose script he co-wrote with his brother. In less than 72 hours, the campaign has already raised nearly $1.8 million of its $2 million goal. Braff said he was inspired by the Veronica Mars campaign; such celebrity successes are impressive, but may signal a sea change in the purpose of crowdfunding platforms--在印第安纳州ependent

Reuters parts ways with deputy social media editor over errant tweets.
News agency Reuters is the latest company to demonstrate the importance of having clear social-media guidelines for employees -- especially ones tweeting on behalf of the company. During the manhunt for the Boston bombing suspects, Reuters' deputy social media editor continued tweeting police scanner traffic even after authorities had asked journalists to stop, and wound up tweeting information that later proved to be false. Even though he'd been tweeting from his personal account, his bio identified him as a Reuters editor, and his bosses were far from pleased. He was dismissed from the company this week. Meanwhile, the editor argues on hispersonal blogthat the instructions and reprimands he received about his actions on Twitter were contradictory.--Politico

Wavy Line

Brian Patrick Eha is a freelance journalist and former assistant editor at Entrepreneur.com. He is writing a book about the global phenomenon of Bitcoin for Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin Random House. It will be published in 2015.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

What Is a 'Lazy Girl Job'? New TikTok Trend Empowers Women to Work However They Want

The trend began as a way for women to find more free time during their days.

Business Process

The Strategy You Need to Make Sure Your Company Can Keep Up in Today's Business World

Discover a superior alternative to a traditional business strategy that prioritizes adaptability, innovation and speed in execution, explores its benefits for entrepreneurs, see real-world scenarios and learn core principles and rules to propel organizations forward with clarity, simplicity and action.

Thought Leaders

I Pitched 300 People a Day For 1 Year — and Learned This Impactful Entrepreneurial Lesson

After working myself to the bone pitching 300 people each day for one year, I came out of that experience as a new man — but surprisingly, an unhappier one. Here's what I learned.

Business Ideas

The Top 10 Home Business Ideas for 2023

Can't figure out which enterprise you should launch in 2023? Check out 10 stellar home business ideas to get inspiration.

Growing a Business

3 Solutions That Help Alleviate Everyday Pressures Small Business Owners Face

We live in a world with increasing pressures from stakeholders, constantly changing customer expectations and volatile financial conditions — which for many, especially business owners — can make it hard to create clear distinctions between professional and personal emotions.