In my previous journal entry I wrote that
Social Networking is Not
Broken but, rather, it is the perception of social networking that
needs fixing. Too often, the knee-jerk reaction is to classify any site that
leverages one’s social network as a YASN (“yet another social network”) - a short-sighted generalization that unfairly
casts a negative stigma on sites that may
be unique and useful.
Who, though, is to blame for this negative stigma? Here are
a few candidates:
Friendster. They
are probably the most well-known “social networking” site. Molly Wood writes
“My big beef
with Friendster was always, 'Well, what would I do there?'". What you can do is see how big you can
grow your network by adding contacts. And since one has a limited pool of
real-world contacts it quickly became not just acceptable, but common-place to
add strangers as contacts on Friendster.
Kleiner, Perkins,
Caufield & Byers. When this VC firm decided to fund the severance
packages of high-profile Friendster execs it gave Friendster’s breed of social
networking legitimacy. Hundreds of journalists started covering “social
networking”, and hundreds of thousands signed up for Friendster and asked
themselves the same question Molly Wood asked.
Orkut. Under the
guise of wanting to ramp up slowly, Orkut launched as an invite-only site. Soon
blogs writing about Orkut weren’t complete without a handful of invitation
requests in the replies. Orkut made it fashionable to add strangers as contacts as way to get into the service. Networks
were artificial from day one.
Tom. You know
Tom. Everybody knows Tom. He’s the most popular person on the planet. If you sign-up for Myspace he’s your friend
that connects you to every other user on Myspace, including dozens of porn
stars. If part of the fun of Friendster was seeing how big of a network you
could get, Myspace upped the ante by giving people a humongous network to start
(and perhaps a more interesting one because it contains porn stars).
It’s unfair, though, to put all the blame for social networking’s negative stigma on
those mentioned above. They are all simply trying to make a buck. Good for
them. The real culprits are the journalists and bloggers who perpetuate the
notion that all social networking services are alike. These are the people that
made Friendster synonymous with “social networking” even though the application
is still in question to this day. Most continue to label Myspace a "social
network" even though every user on the site is linked to one common node.
Some writers flocked to Orkut, loaded their contact lists with strangers, and
then, ironically, complain that social networking doesn’t work.
The press coverage of social networking often misses the boat on
two important concepts: target market, and the actual application. It’s not uncommon for somebody to casually
write about “social networking” and refer to 3 or 4 web sites that have nothing
in common.
Recently Judith Meskill wrote that
LinkedIn
is one of the only SNS in which I continue to maintain a semi-active
membership. The likely reason is that Ms. Meskill is part of
LinkedIn's target market. Myspace, according to Molly Wood, “
attracts 16 to
34-year-old hipsters.” While I don't
know Ms. Meskill's age, based on her writing style and my correspondence with
her, I wouldn’t describe her as a “hipster” nor am I surprised she doesn’t use
Myspace. And that is exactly what Myspace wants! If non-hipsters started using Myspace,
then it wouldn’t be for hipsters and their trendy niche is shot.
More important than the target market is the application
itself. What does the service help its
users do? What is the goal of the service?
Judith Meskill says she’s
semi-active on LinkedIn. The reason, in my opinion, that she uses
LinkedIn and not, say... Friendster, has nothing to do with which site is better at
“social networking” but rather which site is better at providing what Ms.
Meskill wants to do.
So, if social networking is “broken”, how do you fix it?
Easy. When my 1 MP digital camera broke I threw it away. It wasn’t worth
fixing. Do the same with the phrase “social networking” as it pertains to an
industry or space. “Social networking” is merely a technology. It’s a
component. Let’s stop writing about it as an industry. Just like we don't lump together E-mail and Instant Messaging as
"contact list" applications, we should stop referring to any site
that takes advantage of what will soon be a ubiquitous way to manage contact
lists as a “social networking site”.
Don’t write articles that compare Friendster to LinkedIn to
Multiply. Write about what these sites
are about and group them with their true competitors. Friendster is about meeting new people
socially. So compare Friendster to sites like Match.com. LinkedIn is about
meeting new people in a professional context. So write about whether LinkedIn
is better than Monster.com or other sites that help you meet new people in a
professional context. Multiply is about
sharing digital media and social blogging. So don’t compare Multiply to Orkut
or Friendster. Compare Multiply to
Flickr or Blogger.
In the article “Five reasons social networking doesn’t work”
Molly Wood writes that Myspace will make “
more than $20 million in ad sales
this year”. $20 million! That sounds like it does
work! Just as inconsistent is her defining Myspace’s unique target audience yet
still bashing all social networking sites as if they were the same. This
article, which should be called “Five reasons that
some social networking
doesn’t work
for me,” is indicative that what’s amiss is social networking
coverage. If journalists stopped
referencing social networking as an industry unto itself, this article wouldn’t
exist. Instead, we’d get some great pieces discussing how different applications, some
tried-and-true like dating, and some cutting-edge like video-blogging, are
leveraging this new technology in compelling ways.