Posts Tagged ‘Social Media’
Facebook is Hotmail on Speed
From the early days of internet, web email services such as Hotmail and Yahoo Mail have ruled the virtual highways. every transaction one way or another has been going through these services. individuals communicate with their friends and family through them; viral messages/pics/videos are distributed through these channels; businesses reach their customers through them both for promotional campaigns and for transactional information; businesses market through email by buying email lists and sending promotional material to prospective customers.
Playing this pivotal role in our internet lives has given major email providers a significant power in shaping the online universe. With a reported 250 million mailboxes each, Hotmail and Yahoo Mail have been the elite in this universe and have brought significant riches to their owners. This is exactly why Google wanted a piece of this game and introduced Gmail in 2004.
But in the past year or so an interesting shift has been happening. Many of the activities that users were performing through their emails is now shifting to social networks which provide a more “social” version of the same. Here are a few simple examples:
- sending emails to family and friends == writing on their Facebook wall
- email photos as attachment == uploading photos to Facebook
- passing chain emails on == inviting friends to apps that do so on your behalf
- taking quizzes and sharing results == filling up quizzes on social applications
This shift is not just limited to personal interactions. Relationships that businesses were establishing with individuals through emails for many years are also moving to (or being augmented by) their social network equivalent:
- signing up with email and validating it == signing up with Facebook Connect
- receiving transactional email == receiving notifications on Facebook
- signing up for promotional emails == becoming a fan of the brand’s page
- receiving promotional emails == status updates from pages on Facebook
- viral growth through address book import == viral growth through Facebook invite
a very immediate implication of this shift is visible in what businesses go after
- buying email lists for promotional campaigns == buying applications with access to millions of users
- white listing business’ email with Hotmail/Yahoo == verifying business’ Application with Facebook (i am sure verification for pages will follow soon)
Obviously a lot of these activities are simply better when you add a social angel to them. Uploading photos to Facebook and tagging friends in it is a ton easier than composing an HTML email and writing captions around images and sending that to your friends. It’s a ton more fun to post that stupid quiz’s results on Facebook and see how your friends react. However, a more intriguing element in the social version of these interactions is the speed at which they happen. When you post a photo on Facebook you will receive your first comment/like/etc in a matter of minutes. Doing so through email usually gets your first reaction in half a day or so (talk about immediate gratification). The same holds true for business interactions. At Zoosk, we see this speed difference very clearly: users respond to notifications within minutes but emails usually take 12 hours or so for impact.
This speed is particularly intriguing and at times surprising. Is it because our email boxes are way more cluttered than our Facebook notification window? I find that hard to believe. There is already a considerable amount of “spam” in our Facebook notifications and feeds. So, why do consumers react to pings on Facebook so much quicker? I don’t know that answer to this question yet. Here are a few of my theories (leave your theories in comments)
- sense of urgency: my notifications/feed stories/etc will go away. I need to do something now
- state of mind: I am on a social network to sink time, so I am more open to triggers
- social element: my friends will see my action and potentially participate with me so I am more inclined to do something
right now it seems like these two systems are running in parallel. I receive an email for almost every Facebook notification that I receive. But I suspect that this balance won’t last for long. Especially if the effectiveness and speed of this new medium continues to be superior to email as we push more and more interactions onto it.
[side note: This is a critical time in web email services' life. If they are not careful, their power could diminish very quickly. Hotmail and Yahoo are both responding to this shift with "Windows Live Network" (or whatever the social element of hotmail is called) and "Yahoo Connections" both of which are trying to bring social (as in my friends and family) to their experience. I am not convinced that just capturing my social graph (which by the way they both do a horrible job of it) is going to be enough. We recently saw Google take a more ambitious approach to evolving email with their Wave project. The big three internet companies have failed to get social networking right and now they are seeing their grip on email (the other starting point for our surfing habits besides search) is eroding because the same social networks are replacing them.]
As for businesses, this shift/battle means that they need to perfect both mediums until (or if) a clear winner emerges. You still need to whitelist your email servers and also get your Facebook application verified. Yes, this means more work, but you have more opportunities to stay connected to your users. The trick now is to make sure your communication strategy takes the special characteristics of each medium into account and uses them appropriately.
Social Media Needs to Kick its Scam Addiction
Yes, I said it. Everybody involved knows it. It’s the dirty little secret of social media ecosystem. Log onto Facebook, MySpace, or any social application on these platforms or anywhere else. The majority of the ad units you see are for scam related offers. The infamous “crush ads” are everywhere. The whole purpose of these ad units is to get the consumer to enter their cell phone number and usually without realizing it subscribe to a monthly subscription on their mobile phone.
These ads are so profitable that they usually outbid any other advertisers on any network. If Google was not fiercely combating them, the would take over the overall online advertising universe. The actually come in a very few formats that I am sure you have noticed them
- Crush Ads: Someone has a crush on you!
- IQ ads: What is your IQ?
- Age Ads: How old are you really?
- and a few more “creative” ones
