Facebook: Does This 10-Year Old Need Some Serious Time Out?

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So Facebook turned 10 years-old today. Today, Facebook presented me with a Look Back on my own journey since I joined in 2007: My first posts…. as I stumbled to figure out how to use the platform. My most engaging posts… which brought a smile to face. It was pretty nostalgic. Facebook does an amazing job of pulling users in… allowing us to make it a significant part of our day.

Facebook has done some pretty amazing things since it was first introduced. But with time comes challenges and Facebook has had a lot of them. So I’ve decided to curate some pretty significant events and have you decide:  Is Facebook becoming the company it set out to be?

It’s Everybody’s Hangout

I don’t think Zuck ever envisioned that this platform would scale to this enormity. In advance of Facebook’s birthday, Pew Research came out with some interesting facts about this platform:

used by 57% of all adults and 73% of all those ages 12-17. Adult Facebook use is intensifying: 64% of Facebook users visit the site on a daily basis, up from 51% of users who were daily users in 2010.

The future bread and butter of the platform ie teenagers are not necessarily abandoning the site en-masse. As the research indicates, their relationship with the platform is “complicated” and “evolving”. I gathered a few quotes from a forum, entitled: Is Facebook good or bad?

jessieca

piko

 

It’s this “addictive” perpetual hangout spot that has caused the real world to not only question its impact on employee productivity, but also its influence on emotion and frame of mind.  It has evolved to become a place of blatant transparency, uncomfortable conversation, defriending — all the symptoms of the real world knitted into a single platform — all for the world to see. It’s a platform that can be the cause of real world problems. Pew added these stats garnered from Aug/Sept 2013 study:

pew

The User’s Inherent Need for Validation

Facebook understands human needs and dynamics. At a basic level, everyone wants to be liked. The individual need for acceptance has been a strong foundation for Facebook. They’ve always noted that increased Likes, Shares and Comments are forms of validation. So, to feed the “Beast” with our information, Facebook has used these very tools to continue to allow us to publish more about ourselves all in an effort to feel better about ourselves. Manipulative?

It has allowed Facebook to deliver awesome experiences like Looking Back or our personal Year in Review. But it’s also come at some cost to the user.

A Safe Haven for Insidious Behaviour

Anonymity continues to be strong topic when it comes to social networks. It’s the one aspect that allows many a certain level of comfort to be transparent, without being known. Incidences of duplicate, fake or undesirable accounts are a reality. This has the intention of increased SPAM and distributing malicious links. While Facebook expects every account to have a profile, this article suggests that these fake accounts could number as high as 140 million.

In the time I’ve been on Facebook, I’ve witnessed friends’ personal accounts being hacked and impersonated. Facebook has ramped up policies to deal with offending accounts. While this may take some time to deliver resolution, it does work. If you have experienced issues with threats, abuse, fake accounts go to the Facebook Violations section within your Facebook settings.

Prioritizing the Community

Users continue to have this increasingly volatile relationship with Facebook. I remember when Mark Zuckerberg brought Facebook public. Despite investor pressure, Zuck favoured the role of community over ad dollars. It was about making the platform work for its users… not for the advertisers. He said,

Our mission is to be more open and connected… when you give everyone a voice and people power, the system usually ends up in a really good place. So what we view our role as is giving people that power

The reality is that a company going public has responsibilities to its investors. Trying to balance the needs of the community with the need to monetize its platform has been challenging for Facebook.

timelineWhen Timeline was introduced, the new experience had massive implications for business. With the removal of customs tabs Facebook turned the business world upside down.

Pages could no longer display one of their custom applications as their default landing tab that non-fans first see when they visit. This powerful marketing feature allowed Pages to set up a welcome app that teased special content like contests or coupons, but required users to Like the Page for access.

Without default landing tabs, non-fans now had to actively click through the little app tiles overshadowed by a Page’s cover. Many haven’t, and it cost marketers Likes as well as email signups, contest entries, and other key performance indicators.

In addition, Timeline Covers had their own restrictions: inhibiting companies from displaying calls to action or references to Facebook features such as “Like this Page”, purchase or pricing info such as “40% off” or “Download at our website”, or contact information such as web address.

The change is a noble one that prioritizes the user experience and the site’s long-term health, but several marketers I’ve talked to are already grumbling. To date, I’ve seen fewer and fewer Facebook applications on Pages.

With Timeline, Facebook’s goal was to make Pages more about story telling than product selling… and it worked.

Selling Out the Community

The data that Facebook collects about its users is pure gold. It’s the reason the reason that Facebook Q4 earnings rose to $523M, up $64M from the year previous. privacyfb

It didn’t take long for Facebook to succumb to pressure and start leveraging its data to appeal to the demands of the advertiser. A few years ago, the EPIC (Electronic Privacy Information Center) filed a report to the FTC claiming:

Facebook now discloses personal information to third parties that Facebook users previously did not make available,” EPIC said in its complaint. “These changes violate user expectations, diminish user privacy, and contradict Facebook’s own representations. These business practices are Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices.

This was only the beginning. Since then changes to the Facebook Terms of Service have been revised and scrutinized by the FTC and Canada’s own Privacy Commissioner’s office. The reality is that even with the changes, the Terms of Service are still very one sided. Section 2.1 essentially states that Facebook owns your data. In addition, Privacy settings are defaulted as opt-in. It is incumbent upon each user to be informed and change his/her settings.

On top of this, last year’s exposure of Prism and Edward Snowden’s announcement to the world that US government officials have been collecting material on US citizens including search history, the content of emails, file transfers and live chats, compounded the privacy issue when the Guardian announced NSA was also keeping tabs on international users by accessing data from Google, Yahoo, Facebook, Microsoft, Apple to name a few.

The Almighty Dollar… An Ad System Not Without Its Flaws

At the end of the day, Facebook needs to sustain itself. Advertising is the way it has done that. 88% of all its revenues comes directly from its ads. However, last September, this ad platform became a centre of attention.  rahteah

According to Social Media Today,

Facebook had to apologize for the dating ads that appeared on its service featuring Canadian teenager, Rehtaeh Parsons, who had hanged herself in April. The teenager had been the target of cyber-bullying because of online circulation of photos taken of her, after an alleged gang rape in 2011.

This was a clear incident of an advertiser scraping images from the site and using it without authorization. Facebook immediately banned the advertiser from submitting future ads. However, this does not negate the fact that if the ad had not been reported there would be no real mechanism in place to flag these types of violations. By the time the review process takes place, the damage will have already been done!

… Perhaps ONLY Growing Pains?

As Facebook grows up, it will, no doubt, continue to face more challenges. But, as a social platform that has proven to the world that social is a sustainable medium, Facebook–for all its flaws–has given users significant voice and has proven that it’s a new medium for which businesses need to understand and to adapt.

I would argue that prioritizing an ad platform as the main source of revenue is weak. Montetizing users can’t possibly be the end game. Even Google has and figured this out and has diversified its investment.

As well, privacy now changes the game for both business and consumer. Rewriting best practices for communicating and contacting consumers and using personal information will evolve into new relationships with the customer.

The user, now more informed than ever, will perhaps begin to be more discerning about what he/she posts.

This power that Facebook has given the user is now something of contention. It will be interesting to see how Facebook maintains this delicate balance between community needs and investor pressures going forward.

What do you see this prolific 10-year-old grow up to be?

Image sources: http://pixabay.com/en/users/geralt/, phoenix real estate guy

24 thoughts on “Facebook: Does This 10-Year Old Need Some Serious Time Out?

  1. JonAston says:

    Nice review!

    As you may know, I’m not Facebook’s biggest fan – in fact, I could rant for the next 20 minutes. But as much as Facebook is successful despite it’s many bad decisions, terrible coding, and frankly questionable marketing value for anyone other than big brands and self-appointed gurus – you can’t argue with success. I think Facebook has peaked, but (like Microsoft) is won’t die anywhere near quickly enough to satisfy its detractors. All of that said, I am looking forward to trying Paper. XOJA.

  2. hessiej says:

    JonAston  thanks Jon! Facebook is paving the way for all other social-networks who want to grow into viable business applications. Every other social network will learn from Facebook’s mistakes and this is true testament to where the medium is headed. I don’t think Facebook will die but I would hope it will evolve and build other value-added technology outside of its platform. I haven’t been able to get Paper yet. I guess it’s not in Canada yet:)  btw XOHJ:)

  3. ArCIntel says:

    peterarmaly thanks for sharing Peter! ^HJ

  4. hessiejones says:

    kmueller62 thank you sir!

  5. Turkman123 says:

    AmyVernon ArCIntel Probably the worst thing you can do with your personal life info is post it on Facebook.

  6. AmyVernon says:

    Turkman123 ArCIntel Especially if you don’t want people to know about it. 🙂

  7. ArCIntel says:

    AmyVernon Turkman123 Rule of thumb: Buyer Beware.. Especially with the ever-evolving facebook ^HJ

  8. wallowacountyduck says:

    Facebook’s age demographic is moving closer to that of Piniterest-women in their late 30’s through their 40’s. I think this stems from many things, but primarily burn-out and that it is no longer the “new” thing. The growth of Twitter and blogging sites like Tumblr are shifting the age demographics towards the more concise and rapidly consumed SM posting sites. Facebook for me and my FB friends has become more of a “catch up” board and photo storage network. I have observed fewer and fewer friend posts over the last two years with increased promotions that try to fit my data(Facebook fails miserably at that). I think as the average user becomes more savvy to how much their personal data is worth and how it is used there will be a fundamental movement towards social sites that let the user regain control of their personal information.

  9. hessiejones says:

    MirandaSman thanks for the share Miranda:)

  10. hessiej says:

    wallowacountyduck  Thanks for your post. Consumers migrating to other sites like Twitter and Tumblr where there is less demographics information collected is short-sighted. Consumers must understand that personal data is also about behaviour and propensity and that can be surmised from what you post and with whom you interact. Remember that the new demographic on Facebook include 50+ audience who have seen amazing opportunities to keep in touch. 

    And is it realistic to believe that users will regain control over their personal information?  I agree they want transparency, however the same consumer wants relevant messages and offers. You can’t have both and the consumer shouldn’t expect a brand to give them what they want/need without some access to their information.

  11. dbvickery says:

    hessiej JonAston  Nailed it with that first statement – when you ARE the leader in the sector, then you get all of the bumps, bruises, insults, etc. They will have to “adapt or die” because of so many other options, but even that death would take years because of the sheer inertia they’ve established.

    Always a touchy subject, but you can say the same thing about Klout. They are the leader of the “algorithmic scoring of influence” pack – and we’ve all had fun at their expense. Price of being first (or, first to become mainstream)…

  12. hessiej wallowacountyduckI agree totally with your response for the most part. Unfortunately the consumer doesn’t perceive the give and take relationship with brands when it comes to their personal information. That seems to be a concept that marketers have yet to convey in a way that reassures and educates the consumer. It is a conundrum that hopefully is negated as the consumer becomes more educated about how their data is used. Thanks again.

  13. hessiej says:

    wallowacountyduck hessiej  You’re absolutely right and marketers have kept consumers in the dark all this time. I welcome the day when this use of personal data becomes a give and take that benefits both sides (consumers and brands) and doesn’t leave the consumer skeptical and distrusting.

  14. hessiej wallowacountyduckThe big question is; “How can the appropriate data be gathered without alienating the consumer; yet give positive user experience?” It seems to me right now there are many theories on how to attain this but no one has found a solution.

  15. hessiej says:

    wallowacountyduck hessiej  transparency is the key. Sites like BlueKai http://www.bluekai.com/registry/ are already giving the user the choice (for opt-in, and whether they want to be tracked). For the first time companies like these are giving the consumer the power over their own information, something that they should have been privy to much earlier.

  16. hessiej wallowacountyduckI like BlueKai and have just started looking into it a tad bit, which is funny since you suggested it. But to me it is just a partial solution for the consumer but leads to more assumptions than data when it comes to the marketers ability to make strategic decisions.

  17. hessiej says:

    wallowacountyduck hessiej  You’re right it’s only  part of the picture. The marketer now has a responsibility to the consumer to disclose what they access and for what. They’ve never done that before. The reality is that this may throw a wrench into the gap that already divides brand and consumer. However, if done right, the brand will capitalize in spades. This world of engagement is the most challenging and probably the most rewarding to any company who chooses to embrace it and learn from it.

  18. hessiej says:

    dbvickery hessiej JonAston  Brian, I wouldn’t compare Facebook to Klout. Yes Klout was first to the game but so was MySpace and Friendster. But they all suffer from the very same thing: from the inability to stay ahead of the consumer and anticipate needs to dictate changes in the platform. Klout is now changing to a content -based platform to allow users to maximize their individual influence. http://mashable.com/2014/02/10/why-klout-had-to-change/.  They’ve had to evolve because the market was questioning their value prop as time went on. Facebook continues to screw up but it does iterate and yes, it does have the benefit of an engaged user base and that’s a key driver for their sustainability right now.

  19. hessiej wallowacountyduckEngagement! It is the credo that I have tried to live by when it comes to SMM. To me engagement is the single most important and the most overlooked part of the equation. Marketers want limited engagement because it can be frustrating and time consuming, but by it is by far my favorite element and has paid the most dividends in projects I have been involved with.

  20. hessiej says:

    wallowacountyduck hessiej  Agreed! Roll up the sleeves, sit back and get to know each other. It’s also very rewarding. Thanks for the chat Sean!

  21. hessiej wallowacountyduckThank-you Hessie!

  22. mrmikemyself says:

    RachelintheOC AmyMccTobin Interesting reading. To me the negatives of using Facebook outweigh the positives. I don’t use it.

  23. ArCIntel says:

    mantispulse thanks for the mention! Looks like FB is tapping into youth with WhatsApp acquisition!

  24. mantispulse says:

    ArCIntel Saw that…if they get a youth drain, they find another way to reel them back in.

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