The World Is Obsessed With Facebook

The World Is Obsessed With Facebook

 

The World Is Obsessed With Facebook from Alex Trimpe on Vimeo.

alextrimpe.com

Thanks to onlineschools.org for serving as inspiration and providing the data through “Obsessed With Facebook” onlineschools.org/​blog/​facebook-obsession

An informational motion graphics piece by Alex Trimpe
Music by RJD2

Created in Adobe After Effects at The Columbus College of Art & Design (CCAD) for class.

Facebook unveils ‘groups’ feature

6 October 2010 Last updated at 23:06

Facebook unveils ‘groups’ feature

By Maggie Shiels Technology reporter, BBC News, Silicon Valley

Facebook page There are yet more new features being added to the updated Facebook

Facebook has introduced new features aimed at giving users more control over their information and who can see it.

The biggest change will allow users to map their offline life to the online world through small groups.

Users will also be able to download all the data they have uploaded onto the site.

They will also find it easier to see how individual applications are using personal information, Facebook’s chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said.

“The changes today are about giving people more control over how they share in a lot of different contexts,” Mr Zuckerberg told BBC News.

“One of the things we have heard is that people just want to share information with smaller groups of people.

“It will enable people to share things that they wouldn’t have wanted to share with all of their friends.”

He added: “There are some things you are comfortable saying to all your friends at once but a lot of things you only want to share with your close co-workers or your family and there just hasn’t been a great way to do that until now.”

Behaviour changeThe new groups feature will let users form online havens around a discreet circle of people just as they do in the real world from family to work friends and from school friends to friends with a specific interest.

Members will then be able to share information with people specific to that group.

Continue reading the main story

“Start Quote

All the information that is on Facebook comes from people sharing it. It is not our information, it’s the people’s”

End Quote Mark Zuckerberg Chief executive of Facebook

A list feature on Facebook already lets users create subsets of their friends but Mr Zuckerberg said that only about 5% of its 500 million users use it.

“Groups will change behaviour,” Augie Ray a senior analysts with research firm Forrester told BBC News.

“It’s possible that people will join Facebook because they will feel they can control who sees their information. I am a very open person and blast everything I say on Twitter or Facebook but now something like this will allow people to think more deeply about who will see what they say, and will increase engagement.”

Another analyst Ray Valdes of Gartner called groups “a major milestone in a very long road that represents part of the ongoing evolution of our social connections”.

‘False security’Facebook said its engineers had been in lockdown for the past 60 days working on these new products.

One of the new tools called “Download Your Information” is designed to enable users to download everything they have ever posted to the site, such as photos, status updates and wall posts.

Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg Mark Zuckerberg unveiled Facebook’s latest features at the company’s California headquarters

Another new feature is a dashboard that monitors what applications people have used, notes the last time they were used and makes it easier to delete them.

“All the information that is on Facebook comes from people sharing it,” said Mr Zuckerberg.

“It is not our information. It is people’s information. We just have this strong philosophical belief that people own that information and they should be able set exactly who can see it, move it to different applications and use it how they want. They should be able to take it away if they want.”

The groups feature is the one the company touted most heavily and one that Mr Zuckerberg seemed most proud of.

“We think that what we have out of the box, version one, blows away everything else,” he said, referring to “groups” services offered by Internet stalwarts such as Yahoo! and Google.

Privacy has been a constant thorn for the world’s biggest social network whenever it introduces new products or changes settings on the site.

“Mostly i am happy they are giving users more control and I think the groups aspect for the most part does give you this added control,” said Larry Magid, co-director of ConnectSafely.org.

Phone sync worries”The only worry I have is that friends can add people to the group, so if you create a group and are in a group you have to be aware of not only who you add but who others add.

“As long as you are aware of who is in the group it can be a great privacy tool. If it gets out of hand it could give you a sense of false security.”

facebook on an iphone There has been concern over syncing phone contacts with Facebook

The roll out of new products comes amid reports that a syncing feature on the iPhone lets Facebook access contact data and share it on the site.

“It’s very possible that your private phone numbers – and those of lots of your and their friends – are on the site,” said Charles Arthur of the Guardian newspaper.

Another tech blogger, Kurt van Moos, who was the first to warn about this feature in January, outlined his concerns.

“Phone numbers are private and valuable. Most people who have entrusted you with their phone numbers assume you will keep them private and safe,” he said.

In a statement to the BBC, Facebook said confirmed that the site allowed them to sync their friends’ contact information.

“The ability to sync their contacts is used for the purpose of connecting [users] with their friends,” it said.

“All of this information is private and is not shared with any friends or any third party.

“Even if someone wanted to, they could not share any of this information with other friends, for example.”

Facebook added that users could easily delete contacts copied over from their phones.

Using Facebook To Market Your Business

Using Facebook To Market Your Business

By Lyndi Thompson – Tue, 08/03/2010 – 10:26am.

After posting recently on Lyndit.com’s fan page I noticed a link under the post that said “promote”. Sure, I have created Facebook ads before however this time I was curious and decided to dive in and buy my first Lyndit.com advertisement on Facebook. Step by step screen-shots of the whole experience along with insight into what I would recommend if you decide to go down this route yourself.

Over the next 12 screen-shots you will get to see how easy creating a Facebook advertisement really is. This is a long post but happily stuffed with mostly images. Each image has been reduced to fit on the screen. Feel free to click on the photos to get a better look.

The promote link displays when you “own” or are an administrator of a page. Visitors to your fan page will not see this link. Just for you!

Clicking on the link promote brought up this slick little advertisement preview window. Instantly showing how the ad would look as I update copy and even change the image. Click “Edit Ad” to get additional options customizing your ad, target and even set the price you are willing to pay for a visitor to click on your ad.

I updated the body of the text, the default link you see is taken from the article I clicked the “promote” link from. Little messages will appear as you customize your ad letting you know of important elements to consider when creating your text. Facebook prefers that advertisements use appropriate capitalization. NO ONE LIKES WHEN TEXT IS IN ALL CAPS… Oh! Sorry.

This targeting section is my favorite. Perfect layout and presentation for anyone who is either looking to be strategic or is a novice in creating online advertisements. Being able to narrow down what kind of person you want to see your advertisement is key for any business.

My favorite element of targeting that only Facebook is really able to say they can do it well. In every person on Facebook’s bio (100 million registered) there is a section that is filled out with “Likes and Interests” — volunteered information that helps you reach the right people. If you are selling custom made dog collars, type in “dogs” targeting your audience.

This section might not apply to everyone, however if you maintain a lot of different fan pages this section is key. You already have communities you ca leverage with the idea of “If you like this fan page you might like this other one too!”. Managing client’s fan pages I am not going to use this feature however I wanted to highlight how you could easily use this feature to further target your customers/fans.

Then off to the interesting part. Putting value on an advertisement on Facebook. Helping clients decide whether or not Google PPC (Pay-Per-Click) used to be a huge part of my job. Strategically aggressive  was right move to splurge on their marketing budgets in hopes they would ultimately get a phone call or sell a product on their website.

Ah ha — Pricing!

Each time you change a setting this little box on the right hand side gives you an estimate on how many people in the selected area with the preferences you selected could possibly see this advertisement. Which is very helpful for someone is not familiar with pay-per-click editors and creates a good sense of how to value the ads potential.

Keep an eye out on this little box as you start to narrow down your preferences. I selected “social media” in the interests and this little estimated reach box told me less than 20 people in Washington not already connected to Lyndit.com would be reached.

Reviewing the ad is clean and straight forward giving you a good idea of how your advertisement is going to look.

Happy to see that Facebook offers advertisers the ability to quickly and easily pay with their credit card or PayPal. Who ever designed the funnel for the advertisements really wants the users to have a clear understanding of what is happening each step of the way.

After placing an advertisement order I was directed to this advertisement dashboard. Expecting not to have a huge click through rate by only running the advertisement for one day however after the ad runs I will post what the dashboard offers as far as analytics.

Overall creating a quick promotion for Facebook fan pages is pretty easy and quick. Love the ability to target very specific groups of people and use other Facebook fan pages to help narrow down the most likely group to be interested in  the ad. I am currently researching a tool that I could recommend as the best Facebook ad management tool.

Facebook Thinks Email is “Probably Going Away”

Could Facebook Even Survive Without Email?

Saturday, June 26, 2010

By Chris Crum

Facebook thinks email is dying. Classic. How many times have we heard this now? Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg gave a speech at the Nielsen Consumer 360 conference recently, essentially claiming as much.

Do you think email is dying? Comment here.

“In consumer technology, if you want to know what people like us will do tomorrow, you look at what teenagers are doing today, and the latest figures say that only 11% of teenagers email daily. So email (I can’t imagine life without it) is probably going away. So what do teenagers do? They SMS and increasingly they use social networking.” (hat tip to WebGuild.org)

First off, Facebook couldn’t exist without email. You need an email address to sign up and to log-in. Many of us rely on email for notifications from Facebook to know when someone has sent us a message, commented on our posts, invited us to an event, tagged us in a photo, etc. In fact, I’d be curious to see how frequently the average Facebook user would come back to Facebook daily without email notifications.

Facebook Wants Your  Email Address Too

Email lubricates social interactions on Facebook, and I’d be very curious to see how successful Facebook would be without any email integration. I suspect it would die.

To be fair, Sandberg was looking to the future, and not the present when she made this claim. She even said that she couldn’t imagine life without email. It’s interesting, because Facebook is in some ways helping keep email relevant for the reasons mentioned above (though email certainly doesn’t need Facebook’s help to stay relevant).

Facebook requires you to use email to sign-up and log-in, but we are seeing more and more open protocols being used around the web for ID authentication. There are also not-so-open protocols in use, like Facebook Connect. I can log-in to a wide variety of sites/apps with my Facebook ID, but I can’t log-in to Facebook with anything other than my email address. If Facebook thinks email is dying, does that mean it will adopt some other open authentication protocols? Don’t these protocols generally come back to having an email address in the first place anyway?

We’ve written about why social media isn’t killing and will not kill email several times in the past. I don’t want to rehash all of the same points here, so I’ll simply reference a couple of these articles:

- 10 Reasons Social Media isn’t Replacing Email
- Spam Will Not Keep You Away from Email

The popularity of specific social networks comes and goes, but email has been around for a while, and has really shown no signs of going anywhere. Here’s something to consider – how many years has your inbox been flooded with spam? Has it caused you to use email any less? Granted, Facebook does continue to grow, even in the face of massive privacy concerns, but that’s hardly an indication that it could replace email. Sandberg didn’t suggest Facebook itself would replace email, but that SMS and social networking in general would. We’ll see. If Facebook hopes to be a significant part of that replacement on the social networking end, they’re probably going to have to play a little nicer with the open web movement.

I’ll come back to the conclusion we always reach. There is room for both email and social networks. Just like there is now, there will be in the future. As far as marketing is concerned, social networks appear to be greatly enhancing email campaigns. A recent study from GetResponse found that campaigns utilizing these networks were able to increase click-through-rates by 30%.