Tagged with facebook

“The Four Horsemen” – Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple

Another interesting nugget from Greenslade’s blog on the Guardian website:

I attended a breakfast lecture this morning – at the Savoy, since you ask – about the ongoing transition from print to online. I accepted the Chatham House rules so I can’t go into details.

However, the excellent speaker illustrated how, if traditional media owners adopt a digital first strategy, think, innovate, take risks, think again, accept the value of trial and error, go on thinking, and – of course – invest, then there is no reason that publishers need to fold their tents.

I was particularly taken with his acknowledgement of the key part played in our lives by what he called “the four horsemen” – Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple.

They never stop innovating and they never seem to stop growing. And these are the companies building a media future.

You can read the rest here.

Interestingly, at the Great Escape festival in May (this is a music industry event) someone managed to come up with a similar theory; describing the four main players in the digital music industry. They were Spotify, Amazon, Google and Apple – or SAGA if you wanted to abbreviate them. It’s quite remarkable how similar the aforementioned ‘Four Horsemen’ analogy matches that of the SAGA analogy and perhaps another example of how the news media and music industries are not too dissimilar.

Tagged , , , , , , , , , ,

Why has Google+ had a poor start?

Google+ is taking on and not taking on Facebook

The most common question I read on any Google+ profile is always this (or the equivalent of it):

What the heck do I do here?

Since no one knows what to do with it, Google+ has had a bumpy start. It might boast a population of about 40 million users but it means nothing if a lot of these people aren’t doing anything on it; they just have it because they were invited whilst it was the ‘hot new thing’. So why has it stuttered and spluttered?

Here’s Google+ executive Bradley Horowitz talking to AllThingsD. See if you can spot something that connects these two quotes:

“We will compete on features — including simplicity. We are absolutely in a feature race, and I think we will run that race.”

[Google+ users aren't] “looking for an alternative to anything, they’re looking for a better experience on Google.”

You’re right, it’s a trick question. He outright contradicted himself. It’s both a competitor to Facebook and not competing with Facebook. It needs to be clear, both to itself and the customers, what Google+ is meant to be. Is it meant to be part of a better overall experience with Google? Is it meant to be a more security-focused alternative to Facebook? It’s hard enough launching a social network in these times and, unless you actually express clearly to a user what you are meant to be, you won’t succeed.

Besides, if it’s not meant to be an alternative to Facebook, then what makes it different? The few features that did make it unique like circles have since been nicked by Facebook for use in their own design so now we’re left with a clone. A cleaner and more attractive looking clone, but a clone nonetheless. No one is going to go through the pain of leaving Facebook to set up a similar profile on a website that does exactly 0% different. It’s unnecessary, if anything.

Maybe I’m being too harsh on Google+. It’s only been out for a few months and that’s nowhere near enough time for a social network to grow in popularity. It took Twitter a long time to find its feet but once it clicked to people as to how it could be used it became indispensable. Google have themselves to blame though for the instant backlash. If they had kept Google+ low-key for a few more months to work out the kinks and to fully develop it and figure out what would make it unique then we might have ended up with something far better and something worth sending out invites for.

For all I know Google+ could well implement some changes in the future that might make it a far more enticing prospect but given Google’s track record when it comes to this kind of thing (Google Buzz anyone?) I’m not quite so sure. I hope it does because I think it does what it does far better than the clunky interface that Facebook provides but I’m highly unlikely to use it if all my friends are somewhere else.

That is ultimately Google’s £1 million question: how do you convince people to make the jump? I’ll be interested to see if they can find an answer to that question.

Tagged , , ,

Will social networking eat itself?

LOLbook

Social networking. If anything has become big in terms of mass global success in the later half of this decade it is social networking. Whether you’re trying to de-tag yourself from painfully embarrassing photos from a night out, blogging about your emo woes, or telling the world what you think in 140 characters or less there are now several ways that people can organise their own lives online. The power of these services are certainly similar to that of a great destroyer – websites like Friends Reunited are declining in popularity due to the fact that people could get the same service for free on Facebook rather than having to pay.

But in the last three years something interesting has happened. In 2007, a year after the entire world went crazy for MySpace, Facebook was starting to make waves with the status updates, cleaner interface and much more in the way of actual networking. As a result, MySpace had to react and they instead copied everything that made Facebook really good. Facebook was on a roll until early this year when Twitter exploded thanks to a certain Stephen Fry and recently Facebook had to retaliate to keep people using it. How? By copying Twitter entirely. Soon, MySpace will copy those features that are now to be found on Facebook. Basically, social networks have become a chain where once something new and exciting pops up, the old services that were once the same thing will copy them.

Basically, what I’m trying to say is that social networking is eating itself. It’s difficult to predict the future in the world of technology where every second will see something new develop. However, one can’t help but imagine what new social networking trend will emerge next and, perhaps more importantly, how other social networking services will try to make the most of it. There is a great skit on the brilliant The Day Today where they run through fake TV listings and mention an off-the-wall documentary that follows a family in their daily lives via cameras inserted right into the face of each family member. I think someday in the near future we will have that reality and what’s more, in keeping with the Web 2.0 theme, it will be a social networking site. Think YouTube but live streamed – just think of the number of things you could sneakily watch! If someone is reading this and wants to make it work, get in touch so that we can talk about finance…

Tagged , , , , , ,

Why the new Facebook is terrible in three bullet points

Facebook

1. First and foremost, it is trying to be the newest social networking fad – Twitter. There’s just one problem though – social networking websites can’t rip off other ones without having design compromises. For Facebook, the new homepage design is terrible by all accounts as useful links like Events and Groups have all but disappeared (or just had less space than before) in favour of a centralised live feed and a ‘highlights’ column which is absolutely pointless.

2. Clutter. The last version of Facebook wasn’t without its flaws but it wasn’t as messed up as this one. The homepage is now a complete and utter headscramble of  status updates mixed up with big, shouty application updates on the ones that you don’t even use (I don’t bother with the applications – they’re just pointless and even more so when the last design update just pushed them all aside onto a graveyard page).

3. On the profile pages you now have a choice of showing stuff from – and this is assuming that Person A is a hypothetical person of me – Person A + Friends, Just Person A, and Just Friends. What’s the bloody point?

Facebook, as a social networking site, is useful for me in the sense that I can catchup with friends from sixth form and university effectively. Because of this, I have to endure a terrible, clumsily designed website. If I had no ‘friends’, there is nothing on this God-forsaken planet that would make me sign up.

Tagged , , ,
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.