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December 13 2011

Facebook Adds Private Messages for Pages

the implications are actually quite significant: these private message will make it much easier for brands to interact with fans and – critically – complainants, in a more direct and individual manner.

Private interaction, in order to cut on the noise but also be more specific and personal, is welcome. Pages should look more and more like personal profiles. Facebook also made a good UX choice by not allowing Pages to directly message users, only reply.

November 08 2011

Different Amounts of Social Relationships

Mark Zuckerberg:

I think that humans have a capacity for different amounts of social relationships. And I think it varies from person to person but it’s also not about what you should do. You should use the product to keep in touch with whatever set of people you want to. And we try to build all kinds of products that make it so you can stay in touch with small groups.

This is the big challenge for all social network. The fabric of human relationships is vastly more complex than any algorithm can currently handle. Relationships vary over time, context, subtext. They are nonlinear, variable, uncertain.

Existing and not existing at the exact same time.

Will Facebook be the first to grasp the quantum superposition of the human ethos?

October 18 2011

Useless Fans

Roughly 70 percent of Facebook users say that they do not want to be advertised to by businesses that they are fans of.

A bit of a link-bait tactic in titling the article ‘Why Facebook fans are useless’. Yet, the major reasons why brands should still consider Pages is clearly the Open Graph, as Amielle Lake ends up pointing out:

When a user becomes a fan, Facebook aggregates trending and demographic information to give you an indication of who your fans are and where they come from.

And, yeah:

The trick to deriving value is figuring out how to convert a fan.

September 30 2011

Facebook Page Timeline for Brands

Technology is a glittering lure, but there is the rare occasion when the public can be engaged on a level beyond flash. If they have a sentimental bond with the product.

With the introduction of the timeline, Facebook shows that it’s not an engineering company. It’s not even a social network. It’s the carousel the fictional Donald Francis Draper brilliantly pitches in the famous ‘Mad Men’ episode.

Facebook understands social sciences. Facebook understands human behavior.

As humans interact with brands —whether one finds it a positive or negative evolution, will Facebook take that spectacular step for them too?

 

A sentimental bond.

Facebook Pages always felt constrained to me. They never offered the same quality of engagement that a personal profile would give —and for good reason: Brands are not people.

Pages are half-hearted. While they obviously provide a potent platform to engage with users on Facebook, they were never given the display of an identity. And I don’t even think Pages are the true force of Facebook for brands (more on that below).

Still.

Brands have personas. Brands have a past, a present and a future. At its essence, branding is about storytelling. The Timeline experience was made for them.

 

The itch.

I decided to undertake an exercise. An exercise of style, sure, but more like an exercise in branding experience.

Apple is not on Facebook. Yet [1]. Below is thus a fictional future, a result of my imagination [2] .

 

From top to bottom:

  • The Billboard. The cover image feature for personal profiles —here’s my customization— shouts “branding” since I’ve seen it [3]. Perfect for the latest product —still not the iPhone at the time of this writing.
  • The History. From Apple’s foundation, to 1997′s coming back of Steve Jobs, to today. Brands have a past, a present and a future.
  • The Fans. You, me and all the Apple fanboys.
  • The Application box and its Selector. Here a feature of Apple’s main areas of interest —as shown on its website.
  • The Storytelling. Quite evidently, the stories. No more falling from a cliff —as in the current news feed, but in chronological order.
  • The Product Display. A featured story, here images of the iPad line. A Facebook version of the point of sale display.

 

The glittering lure.

The exercise was worth it. First and foremost, it cemented my belief that Pages would need a slightly different set of tools.

Giving Pages the ability to add third-party applications, even as welcome pages, has been well used —if not overused— by brands. Now, if I truly think about it, most of those are actually annoying from a user point of view —and the user experience is the focus of Facebook.

Remember when we were able to add applications on our profiles, through ‘boxes’? Exactly. I wouldn’t be surprised if Facebook decided to simply disallow the possibility of using specific code on Pages. It would piss some brands off and certainly leave some developers in disarray, but Facebook has always had a kind of “Take no prisoner” approach to its UX changes that I truly admire. I call it focus.

 

A deeper bond.

The focus is now on the activity streams. The signals given and received by users. With the extension of the vocabulary of signals beyond Like (Listen, Watch or Want come to mind), brands should be focused on signaling applications. Not custom welcomes on their static Pages, but applications that talk and engage with their customers. Living applications. Evolving applications. Applications that communicate and signal seamlessly with people —the Washington Post social reader being an example of this evolution.

The power is in the ecosystem. In the organic discussions. Much less in the more static Pages.

Think about it, a user can signal the music he’s listening to via Spotify, a brand could signal the start of a live stream by pinging all its Fans, like for that iPhone event next week.

In my above rendition though, I went for a tamer Application box. A display of customized elements. It wouldn’t disturb brands as much, especially the smaller ones, but I’m not sure such an experience would be satisfactory in the long run.

 

Nostalgia.

Another very evident element of the move towards a Timeline for brands would be the surfacing of the past. Like for all of us who suddenly re-discover past updates and pictures, brands would have to take a serious look at their Facebook past.

What would Nestle do? Would it keep the controversial statements when it got hit by comments about its environmental record —a ‘campaign’ launched by Greenpeace?

This leads me to one last important difference in this imaginary Page: I have left out the possibility of showing “Everyone” as a default view. It never made complete sense for me to leave it as is anyway, unless the Page goal was to be a discussion forum. I wouldn’t think Facebook would shut this completely though —again, its focus is on the user.

 

Around and around.

This was only a pure exercise. A brainstorming session with myself —feel free to flame me. I have no knowledge of Facebook willing to move towards a Timeline model for Pages. I even expect them to come up with something much more disruptive than what I’ve designed here.

My point was and remains that a deeper bond with brands is possible on Facebook. Facebook understands human behavior. Like that Greek named Teddy.

Technology is a glittering lure, but there is the rare occasion when the public can be engaged on a level beyond flash. If they have a sentimental bond with the product. My first job I was in-house at a fur company. This old pro copy writer. A Greek named Teddy. And Teddy told me the most important idea in advertising is “new.” It creates an itch. You simply put your product in there as a kind of calamine lotion. But he also talked about a deeper bond with a product. Nostalgia. It’s delicate but potent. …

Teddy told me that in Greek, “nostalgia” literally means “the pain from an old wound.” It’s a twinge in your heart far more powerful than memory alone. This device isn’t a spaceship, it’s a time machine. It goes backwards, and forwards… it takes us to a place where we ache to go again. It’s not called the wheel, it’s called the carousel. It let’s us travel the way a child travels – around and around, and back home again, to a place where we know are loved.

—Don Draper, in ‘Mad Men’, ‘The Wheel’, season 1, episode 13 (2007).

 

 

  1. it may happen as soon as October 4th
  2. I have used designs and images belonging to Facebook and Apple to create this mock-up, I believe it is a case of fair-use —and admiration.
  3. Mashable displays some nice mockups created by advertising agencies

September 15 2011

Facebook Friend Risk

Among the first things reporters do when a non-public persona surges into the spotlight for something as big as the UBS rogue trading crime is search through Facebook “Friend” lists to get insight into the person. It’s actually the first thing IBTimes did this morning, for instance — sending e-mails to many among Adoboli’s Facebook “Friend” list.

The fact is that it’s also what I did. As soon as the name popped up in news articles, I went to look on his Facebook profile —but also on LinkedIn. Macabre curiosity. I’m not looking for excuses here.

It’s only the nature of the job of journalists: they will try to find a glimpse of who is the alleged criminal through what he willingly displayed online, but might also try to contact acquaintances on social networks to learn more. It doesn’t make any of his connections suspects of any crimes obviously, but I understand how uncomfortable this situation could be for the 419 of his ‘Friends’.

One cannot hide from another Friend list. It’s a decision that isn’t taken by third parties. For instance, having a public profile myself, everyone can see who is linked with me on Facebook. I’m okay with it, but I don’t know about every single one of my connections.

It is again a case of the reversal of the private sphere. What was private by default —no one had a list of my acquaintances— is now public by default.

 

 

September 04 2011

Facebook Translate

In tests that we and others are now seeing on some parts of the site (only on Pages, at this point), comments in languages other than your account’s current one now include “Translate” button next to them. If you click on the button, the comment is automatically translated to your account language. The Translate button is then replaced by “Original,” which if clicked will untranslate the comment.

Simon Kemp mentioned in his SMWF Asia talk this Friday in Singapore how global brands were adapting to an audience that speaks many languages. Some brands go the route of having only one global Page presence, holding multilingual conversations.

This is a human-intensive and time-consuming option that works for big brands. Many smaller players simply use Google Translate, if they care at all. The launch of a Translate option on Page comments would therefore be welcomed by many. My guess is that it’s using the same crowd sourced Translation Tool that’s been offered to app developers since July 2008.

I would advise brands that look for a more precise approach to their own comments —but also their content in general— to look at myGengo‘s innovative solution: the Human Translation API.

May 06 2010

July 22 2009

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