Emily Tan
Jun 16, 2011

Tourism Malaysia called out over US$600k Facebook budget

KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia's minister of tourism, Datuk Dr Ng Yen Yen, will have to explain Tourism Malaysia's US$600,000 (RM1.8 million) expenditure to develop Facebook campaigns, said deputy prime minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin today.

Malaysians form protest page against Tourism Malaysia's social media budget
Malaysians form protest page against Tourism Malaysia's social media budget

The deputy prime minister added that if Ng's explanations were deemed unsatisfactory, the government may investigate, according to the Malaysian Insider.

The brouhaha over Tourism Malaysia's Facebook advertising expenditure started when the figure was shared on Tuesday during a session in Parliament by deputy tourism minister James Dawos Mamit. The amount was called into question by Democratic Action Party member of parliament for Rasah Anthony Loke.

Reported in local dailies, the figure has Malaysian netizens in an uproar, with a protest Facebook page titled Curi-curi Wang Malaysia (Stealing Malaysian money) gaining more followers than Tourism Malaysia's own site — over 59,000 'likes' compared with 32,000.

The page, a pun on Tourism Malaysia's slogan Cuti-cuti Malaysia (Malaysian holiday) was formed to "prove to the government (it doesn't) need to spend RM1.8 million for a successful fan page," the page's information details state.

Stepping forward to explain, Ng said that the funds was for six separate advertising campaigns over a period of seven months and was for social media, "not just Facebook".

A press release posted yesterday on Tourism Malaysia's Facebook fan page listed the six campaigns as: 

  • Citrawarna 1Malaysia
  • 1Malaysia Malaysia Mega Sale/Malaysia Year End Sale
  • Cuti-Cuti 1Malaysia
  • 1Malaysia Contemporary Art Tourism contest
  • 1Malaysia Green and Clean Campaign
  • Fabulous Food 1Malaysia

The money would be used for hardware, development of pages, design, games development, advertising campaigns on Google and Facebook and content management, among others.

The ministry also listed its goals as an average of 20,000 fans per campaign, a minimum of 120,000 fans by the end of December, and to use this information to communicate directly with fans by the end of the year.

The release added that tourism had earned the country US$18.4 billion (RM56 billion) last year and pointed out that neighbouring countries the Philippines and Australia had budgeted US$2.3 million (PHP100 million) and US$158 million (AU$150 million) for its social media campaigns respectively.

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

S4 Capital reports 13.5% revenue fall and increased ...

Its AI positioning has led to new business from blue chips, the group said.

2 hours ago

Breaking down the implications of Google’s ad tech ...

What both sides need to argue to win — and the potential ramifications to follow.

3 hours ago

Kaizzen goes global in a bid to redefine real-time ...

The integrated communications agency’s move to establish a global presence comes after its first international footprint in Dubai last year.

10 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: The trailblazers redefining ...

Campaign Asia-Pacific's prestigious 40 Under 40 winners are driving innovation and pushing boundaries across the region's marketing landscape. Prepare to be inspired.