Monthly Archive for November, 2008

When to extend your web site onto a social network

How a social media expert feels when he tries to engage with features on the web that should be on a social network!How a social media expert feels when he tries to engage with features on the web that should be on a social network!

As I outlined in this post about the Sky News election map I often find myself wanting more social features from the day to day web.

With the advent of social networks and great features like easy sharing, friend awareness and friend to friend communication, it’s not entirely clear when web site owners can extend their channel onto the new platforms to take advantage of these features.

There are three approaches:

  1. Do nothing - “our traffic is still strong, the users will keep coming to us anyway, it’s the only place to get this feature or find this content”
  2. Outreach and capture - “lets reach out to the users on the social network and get them to come to our web site”
  3. Exist in the new world - “lets make our channel features and content available to users in their preferred social networking environment”

To each web site owner there will be a different answer to this question. For companies house there is almost no advantage in using social networks - businesses have to visit their web site to file returns by law, similarly a bank has little to gain with providing its features (transactions, account balances) on the social network.

On the flip side, for a web site that is strongly social  (film web sites for example) it must get its content (film trailers, movie show times) and features (watch trailer, discover nearest cinema) onto social networks as a matter of urgency. Hence we see Facebook trialling Video Social Ads and Adknowledge’s videotheater app.

Films compete with each other for viewers budgets. Imagine if a trailer for Film X is shared, discussed and engaged with on a social network and a trailer for Film Y is simply viewed on a website - there are no prizes for guessing which will one the viewers will be more comfortable picking at their next outing to the multi-screen cinema.

So the message for today - create a matrix and break down your features and content one by one and decide “where would it most make sense for my customers to engage with this?” - you may be surprised by the results.

What’s New on the Facebook Platform, November 2008

I presented a short presentation at last night’s London Facebook Developer Garage.

The Garage was definitely one of the best in recent memory - lots of people, great speakers, interesting questions. You can find out more at the London Facebook Developer Garage site.

The key Facebook changes this month were:

  • Action Links in Feed Stories
  • Facebook Growing Up - Alcohol-related content with Demographic Restrictions
  • Feed Story Preview Console

The slides are below:

Collaboration on Facebook: Serious Business

Those who think that Facebook is just for giving that friend a poke and sharing photos of last weekend’s party might not expect the more serious possibilities that Facebook might offer. With tens of thousands of Facebook apps created by 3rd party developers, it isn’t amazing to see some of them being dedicated to online collaboration. We picked a few of the most interesting ones for you to highlight.

Chat Rooms

Although FaceBook now offers their own in-built chat, it’s not the handiest way of communicating to a group of friends or colleagues. In comes the Chat Rooms application, which allows you to start group conversations within Facebook. So why have your meeting through a third party tool where you have to explain how to get the application to work when you can just invite your friends to a chat right inside Facebook?!

MyOffice

Having a tough time getting your team on the same page? MyOffice lets you quickly and easily collaborate with your colleagues, partners, or clients on one or multiple projects. Allowing you to organize events, schedule meetings, discuss ideas, and much more. This online collaboration suite is fully integrated in Facebook and ideal for companies, organizations, and other individuals in the need to organize a group of people.

Huddle Workspaces

Obviously online collaboration tools have been around for a while, so why use an unknown application inside Facebook if there are so many established tools? For those looking for the best of both worlds it might be worth to take a look at Huddle Workspaces for Facebook. Huddle allows you to work on your workspaces on their own site, on Facebook, and even on LinkedIn.

Study Groups

Even students (the original target audience for Facebook) can find their fair share of online collaboration applications. A few of them stood out, one of which is the Study Groups application which has most of the standard collaboration features of other applications but offers clear distinction between teachers and students.

Blackboard Sync

Just as with normal collaboration suites like Huddle, student collaboration suites have also been around since well before Facebook. The most popular platform used at universities and schools is probably Blackboard. With the introduction of Blackboard Sync you can now sync between Facebook and Blackboard, allowing you to get updates on anything that happens within Blackboard without leaving Facebook.

Latest UK social networking statistics

 

Brett Brewer, president of Adknowledge, explains the social network ad space

Brett Brewer, president of Adknowledge, explains the social network ad space

 

 

At yesterdays M&M briefing (supported by Adknowledge) on harnessing social applications for brands we got the latest stats from the guys at Nielsen. The highlights are pretty impressive, especially for Social Networks and in particular Facebook:

1. Social Networks are now mainstream in the UK reaching across all ages

21.8 million people in the UK are now on social networks (that’s over 60% of the total UK online population)

Distribution has lost its skew towards under 18s and is now 11% 2-17, 35% 18-34 year olds and a massive 54% in the 35’s and over. 

2. Facebook is king

 

Even my Dad is getting tagged by villagers in Aceh, Indonesia

Even my Dad is now getting tagged by staff and villagers in Aceh, Indonesia

 

 

The age skew disappearance across the top 50 social networks is partly accounted for by some growth at LinkedIn (who has an older demographic) but its predominantly a Facebook thing - older brits are arriving on the Facebook scene - 14.4m monthly uniques in September 08. (that’s nearly half the UK online population). Myspace managed 5m uniques and Bebo 4.4m over the same period. But these networks are looking even more niche every month (Bebo for youth self expression and MySpace for music).

In terms of stickiness we rack up on 4 hours 24 minutes on Facebook each month. compare this with a paltry 47 minutes on Myspace or 1 hour 23 on Bebo.

3. Facebook apps are being used more.

In July last year you might have spent 1 in 20 of your precious Facebook minutes on an app - that’s up to 1 in every 5 this year.

Of these the striking stat is not, as you might expect, that we all play Playfish at work, it’s that 20% of all Facebook online app time is spent on Mob Wars. Just how addictive is this one game!

4. Connect, enjoy and express

Universal Mccann added to the stats with a great survey on Social networking motivation:

We use social networks it seems to

  • Connect - stay in touch with friends (90%), meet new people (45%)
  • Enjoy - fun, and entertainment (58%)
  • Express ourselves - upload photos (82%), blog (22%), upload videos(32%)