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Can Facebook Take Us To The Future

Last year, Forrester published an interesting report called “The Future of the Social Web”. In it, they talk about how social interactions on the web have changed since it first reached maturity (around 2003) and where social interactions are going through 2013. When I first read the report last year, Facebook Connect was all the rage and the predictions that were made seemed like on the glimmer of the future. But when I pulled out the report again late last week and realized that in less than a year, many of Forrester’s predictions had become a reality and that their predictions for 2013 were really only just around the corner, my jaw dropped.

It’s easy when you work in this business every day to take for granted the speed of innovation. When each day’s RSS feed bring something new, you can lose sight of the bigger picture. This is a dangerous position because as technology accelerates us ever faster toward “the future”, brands run the distinct risk of being left behind.

Forrester’s report described the era of social colonization which turned out to be a brief blip on the Internet’s timeline. In this stage, Facebook Connect allowed people to traverse the web, taking their Facebook friends with them. The boundaries between social networks and websites started to receed and the response was huge. Websites loved how Facebook Connect so simply made relevancy and sharability possible on their sites. Users loved the novelty of hanging around with their friends on little social colonies outside of Facebook.

Next comes the era of social context. This is the era we are in now, with all of it’s privacy pain and misfortune. The concept is that sites will recognize people’s personal identity and social graph and personalize their experience based on it. So when you arrive at Pandora.com, the site is personalized with your Facebook friends playlists and favorites, allowing you to browse their selections and work them into your own.  Mark Zukerberg has really taken a beating for being the company that ushered in this era. But you can’t blame the kid. He has build a company with an extreme and successful approach to innovation. I think his problem is that he built a site based on the concept that you have a safe place to go and share things with people you know. But now, in the Twitter and Flickr era, open sharing has become a more important trend and Mark & Co are determined not to miss the boat. For the average Joe, this trend shift is not even a part of their consciousness so for the largest and most popular social network to thrust it upon them is going to be painful. But, I have no doubt that users will come around to the idea of a social context web and in many ways, they already have. But can Mark take us to the next level of Forrester’s prediction?

The next era is that of social commerce. Forrester predicts that by 2013 (and perhaps before), communities will become much more powerful. Versatile, open IDs will merge social sites and the larger web into a common experience. Users will have complete control over their identities and will choose what of their personal data they want to expose to brands. Brands that have gained users trust will be able to offer more personalized experiences on a larger scale and sites like Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter will become the intermediaries between consumers and brands in the information-sharing dance. Since consumers will at that point be harnessing their collective buying power through communities, this intermediary role becomes critical and powerful as does the brand’s ability to solicit that user’s data. Trust in a brand’s ability to do cool (not creepy) stuff with your personal information will elicit community purchases and become a true competitive advantage.

Facebook is clearly on the forefront of this movement today. My question is for how long? There are so many utilities out there for sharing, rating/liking, reviewing, acknowledging, etc. Will something like OpenID bring the robust unification of utilities that will make life easier on consumers and data more robust for marketers? Or do these folks at the OExchange have the solution, with their quest for standardizing the link and information sharing process across the web? Or will Facebook themselves deliver an interoperable standard for these items? And as more and more of these utilities move to open source solutions, how will your own brand be positioned to take advantage of a future that looks very different than today and yet is only a couple of years away.

I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments.

posted by julia in Just Plain Interesting | 1 Comment »
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Let’s Face It, Facebook’s UI Was Lacking

I suppose hindsight really is 20/20.  Aside from my gripes about managing Facebook Pages and my tendency to sometimes just Google an application to find it’s Facebook page rather than navigating to it, Facebook’s previous design seemed to me to be an adequate method for harnessing all of the tiny tid-bits of information that a person’s network can produce.

Maybe it’s that we are only now beginning to develop a sophistication when it comes to social networking user experiences.  We put up with the early MySpace UI for all of those months, after all, because it let us interact with our friends in a way we hadn’t been able to do before.  I’ve been experimenting with Polyvore and Houzz (both social utilities with a fairly narrow focus) for my personal blog in these last few weeks. I find their UI to be atrocious, but their functionality is pretty cool and novel so I put up with it.

But on their 6th anniversary and with 400 million users putting it to the test, Facebook has unveiled a redesign that makes their previous UI seem like it was from the dark ages.  Here were my first impressions when I logged on this morning:

I think some people will miss the ability to access applications, games, and pages from deeper within the site – say, from a friend’s profile page.  That was the genius of the drop-up from the lower left in the previous design.  It will be interesting to see how Facebook responds to that if/when it becomes a gripe.  But I think this redesign accomplishes something that Facebook sorely needed – an invitation to discover, beyond what is in your friend feed at that moment.

I predict it will increase the depth with which users explore the site, increase user page views per visit, and open up opportunities for marketer interaction and serving ads.  I also predict that the next innovation will be real-time refreshes of the News Feed, very similar to Twitter.  Real time information is what it’s all about, after all.

Whatever and whenever the next redesign comes, I wonder if it will leave me feeling the same way I do today – impressed by how far we’ve come.

posted by julia in Just Plain Interesting | No Comments »
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