Tag Archive: Myspace


Everything that catches attention always comes under the close scrutiny of the critics. Everyone has an opinion be it the tech geeks, social media experts, politicians or the general public. And when it comes to Facebook –  we love to have conversation about it both on and off it. facebook engancha

Cynics have suggested conspiracy theories of world domination in Facebook’s policies. Well, it could seem quite believable when you find the company imitating ever walk of ones social life and wrapping it for display online. It’s not that no one has tried it before- MySpace, Orkut and loads of other have traveled the same road and got lost in tech graveyard. Sometimes the burden of rising user expectations have pulled them down while at other times extreme focus on monetization of user base have got them bleeding.

Though the jury is still out on Facebook’s future – nearly a billion users network can’t be discounted that easily. The social in facebook is still strong and those who think getting the taste of e-com to the network could be the beginning of the end are in for a big surprise. Simply because ‘Money is Social’. That’s where most networks in the pre-Facebook era have lost the plot. They tried to monetize the social by selling it i.e. the numbers to advertisers anyone and everyone. Perhaps it was the only logical model that they saw delivering the moolah following the steps of big brother Google.

But Google didn’t have stakes on social until recently with G+. What these networks didn’t understand was that Google was all about numbers and algorithms – a mechanical code that barely touched upon the psyche of social existence. In fact, only thing it managed to capture was the hype and persona of the glittery banner ads with somewhat segmented traffic base which came in hordes and disappeared even quickly. But Google has evolved and learned it’s lesson about where the real money is.

So where is the real money? Well, its there where it has always been. Any guesses? Yes, its the people. People have the money. But people have a nasty habit – they don’t give you the money when you want it unless that’s what they want and they have to want it badly. And Google or Facebook  would want them to do just that.

So, what’s the great idea – Make Money Social. And Facebook is doing exactly that. It is enticing enough for people to mirror their real life or reel life relationships on the network. And now that everyone I know and you know is on Facebook what’s the next thing we can do.

Well, it’s the same thing you do every Friday after work? PARTY.

Only difference is this party doesn’t need a Friday to start. It lasts the whole week. Your fancy clothes retailer is even offering an ‘Offer’ with exclusive discount. You got shoes available too. Well, why not invite everyone else too! And you know what’s even better let’s show off to the losers who missed out. Blahhh.

Well, that’s facebook. So when next time someone tells you Social is money! They are almost right but it has always been the other way round. Remember this – whoever said money can’t buy everything didn’t know how to Facebook.

Help him log in. Peace!

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Well, this article was actually supposed to be about Myths about Facebook. The serious stuff. Will write that sometime today.

Here is my article on ‘Waste it or save it, it’s your identity, digitally yours‘ first published in the Daily Post India.

The times are ripe for a digital revolution. Well, wasn’t the Arab Spring too a fine example connecting the masses with social networking? Facebook, Twitter, Youtube, Google maps, forums and proxy servers were all in action to connect the fighting Arabs with their brethren, at large. They had a purpose, and they all fared quite well.Image representing MySpace as depicted in Crun...

So, post Hosni Mubarak’s dethroning and Muammar Gaddafi perishing, what is next? What happens to the blog that saw several hundred posts a day, the Twitter handle that fired 140 characters every minute and the Flicker page that crowdsourced pictures from across the Middle East. Well, as expected things are now quieter and some of these digital outposts have been silenced and others abandoned over the weeks. These unattended user profiles and blogs are considered as digital waste by some experts.

According to the recent estimates, WordPress.com, the famous blogging site, has reached the 60-million mark, and social networking behemoth Facebook is inching closer towards its 1billionth user. Isn’t that a revolution of the masses? Well, it is and it isn’t too.

The number of active members on Facebook can be pegged at 400-500 million, much less than its total strength. So, there is a difference between the total number of users who opt for a social network or blogging service and those who actually go for it. The digital waste is created and fed by us intentionally or otherwise.

Now, while most of us have created a Facebook or Twitter account, how often do we use it for what it’s intended? The abandoned pieces of our digital personality are plenty in number. Remember Orkut? Did you make a crossover to Facebook but still maintain the Orkut account that seldom gets your attention? And now all your college friends are tweeting about the professor’s receding hairline and you feel left out! Okay, so did someone create a blog to celebrate their love for Metallica and you too are feeling the pressure to stamp your personality digitally by taking your photography passion online?

Being socially active on an online network is part of growing up process, courtesy MySpace, Orkut to Facebook and now Google+. However, we are leaving a trail of our digital self in the form of networks, which in time either get ignored or abandoned by us for various reasons. The digital waste of our life tells a story about who we were in a time not so long ago.

This waste could also become something to cherish, when many years from now, a Google search would tell your kids that their dad was almost a rock star in college, posing with that embarrassing picture in the hostel dorm, which got you almost expelled from college!

Waste it or save it, it’s your identity, and it’s always going to be digitally yours.

vishalsharrma@dailypostindia.com

Chris Brogan - Social Media Talk

Image by Michael Mistretta via Flickr

(a bit too late but finally this post is seeing the light and is out of my notes)

First results for Google+ has been out for few weeks now  and it was pegged at a total of 20mn members in 3 weeks since its limited trial phase launch. The web went into a tizzy when Larry Page CEO announced the 10mn mark simply because that’s the fastest organic growth any social network has ever seen. It took Facebook 852 days and Twitter 780 days to reach this milestone.

However, no one is astonished possibly because the social network has become the most sort after thing since Facebook first came in 2004.  As predicted on this blog, perhaps Google+ would become the first social network on the planet to reach 10mn  to 100mn within the shortest time frame. Shortly after Larry’s announcement something happened that is forcing us to think if Google+ is the ultimate nemesis of Facebook and would crush it just like Facebook engulfed MySpace:

Chris brogan proudly announced on his Google+ profile his dislike for Facebook and how he has been using it grudgingly since he didn’t have any other better option but won’t be using that as actively any longer. He also thought that Google+ has probably touched 100mn users.

Besides that error in calculation has he summed up the emotions for many of us regarding Facebook, which always categorized all of our contacts as ‘friends’. I don’t imply that Facebook doesn’t understand the concept of Circles (the famous Googler Paul Adams , who now works with Facebook and part of his work on this concept can still be found on SlideShare: The real life of social network) but it has never made an effort to help users understand how to categories online relationships, which remains buried under its settings unlike easy to use Google+ contact management.

Was it  the social networking fatigue  and also the eagerness to check out the new kid on the block that has led masses to Google+? However, when likes of Chris Brogan start abandoning it, questions are asked about what comes NEXT!

To answer that we need to understand first who Chris brogan is: here

So he is influential, has been voted as Most Influential Person in Small Business on Twitter recently among countless other things that makes people follow and listen to him.

Does that mean mass abandonment of Facebook following influencers like Chris?An influencer with years of social captial moving to Google+ would mean his followers would follow him where he leads them. Isn’t that the oldest strategy in the influencer marketing book used by corporates to drive engagement to their brand. And when an influencer like Chris chooses a new platform many others (peers and followers) are expected to follow suit.

So what reasons could Chris have in mind before his migratory flight. This could probably help you decide if you wanna take the plunge too:

1. Google is bigger than ever before as proved by its latest figures released. A super rise in revenue exceeding market expectations.

2. Social networking platforms are known business integrators, and Google (apps) & Google+ are no different. Sooner rather than later Google+ will get you. Watch how

3. Google+ is SMEs best friend: Which SME doesn’t want to top Google search ranking, and when Google starts to integrate (in search) +1′s from Google+, then with the help of your community and your links (content) your business will shoot for the skies. More social and engaging your business is more relevant you will become. Unless of course Facebook + Bing overtakes the search engine market over night! Unlikely

4. Google+ business solutions: Google has started experimenting with its business pages. My guess is expect something very innovative with in-built community management features that lets you take care of your business communication as well as community need at the same time.

These reasons are good enough starters to adopt Google+ especially if:

1. You reckon your business prospects would eventually end up using this platform and aggregate their social + business processes through it. You want to service them, then be here.

2. You want to establish yourself as an influencer and want to surface in the real time Google search in near future, this is the time to amass your community and build links.

3. More than anything else: You believe in relationships and are willing to be social in next generation of web revolution.

PS: Chris didn’t pay me to write this and neither did Google. Though I wouldn’t mind in case they offered ;)

Who thought a week back that something called Google+ would have people falling head over heels for access to the latest social network to hit the planet. While few got in, and many wait at the doorsteps envying the guys inside, its not a surprise the amazing response Google+ got. One of the guy who got in and is the most followed member so far in there is founder of Facebook Mark Zuckerberg.

Google and Facebook have been pitted against each other for years. Google’s missed opportunities to enter the social domain has only helped Facebook to cruise ahead with a 750million members on board.

The Palo Alto based company with a crazy speculative valuation of $50billion has always led from the front dwarfing the competition. The early comparisons were with Myspace, which recently got sold for $35mn (Myspace was once valued at $1bn).  Though this is not the first attempt by Google to enter the social domain. Google has previously experimented with Google Buzz, which became notorious for its privacy mischief during its early days. But this time Google is playing its card just right or so it seems. Integrating social with search and bringing together rest of its apps around Google+ will pay dividends for it. This could possibly be the tectonic shift in the social media space if Google+ can continue the momentum.

Facebook may be big but its not invincible. One thing is sure its going to be a lot of time before this space stabilizes and show any kind of saturation.

PS: It would be awesome to watch the sequel of The Social Network with characters of Mark Zuckerberg, Larry Page and Sergey Brin all in one.

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