Global Thoughtz Social Media

Archive for February, 2008

Social Networks - A Localized Global Phenomenon

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

Facebook, and social networks in particular, are a medium to “Simply be you, online!”. It is essentially different from everything that is on the web because it brings a flow of real people with real identities and real interaction with their friends, families, fans, followers and future contacts.

When the web burst into the scenes with Netscape in 95, there was a famous saying “On the Internet you do not know if you are a dog” because it was new to create web sites for dogs and cats. But on social networks, I don’t think people create pages for their pets, instead they create real pages for themselves and brag about their pets.

We have looked at cumulative stats of market share of various social networks worldwide. So, we all agree it is a global phenomenon. But each of us are on one social network predominantly and are on couple more networks which we think are much smaller.

Valleywag got a world map of social networks in different acountries from Alexa (picture below, credits: valleywag.com)

 Why is this so? I am primarily on facebook, have accounts on Orkut and Myspace with overlapping social graph, but there are some relations which are never going to leave one network to another to be with me because the majority of their real social graphs are on that network.

The reason Facebook is my primary network is because it brings my real social network from real life onto facebook.  

This is a natural reason that will bring the entire world with all its diversity into diverse set of networks and hopefully provide creativity for new technologies to bridge across various networks according to the user’s choice.

Here is an interesting grouping of social networks marketshare per continent worldwide (source:lemonde.fr)

Facebook Growth Slowing Down?

Saturday, February 23rd, 2008

Source: Techcrunch - The number of people who visit Facebook has been leveling off over the past few months in the U.S., and even dipped by about 800,000 individuals in January. According to the latest stats from comScore, Facebook attracted 33.9 million unique visitors in January, 2008, down 2 percent from 34.7 million in December, 2007. Maybe all that friend spam has something to do with the decline. Will the Facebook fatigue get worse, or is this just a temporary dip?

facebook-chart-jan-08-us.png

Worldwide, Facebook is still doing fine. It grew 3 percent in January over December, attracting 100.7 million unique visitors. (MySpace had 109.3 million visitors worldwide, up 2 percent month-over-month. And in the U.S., it was slightly down as well from 68.9 million visitors in December, 2007 to 68.6 million in January, 2008. Despite its larger size, though, MySpace lost fewer visitors in the U.S. than Facebook did).