Mittwoch, 28. April 2010

Do You "Like" How Facebook Phrases Your Likes? Marco Spoerrle

 Do You "Like" How Facebook Phrases Your Likes? Marco Spoerrle

Now that most of the web is scrambling to get like buttons and/or recommend buttons on their sites, there is going to be more "liking" and "recommending" on Facebook than ever before. While users may like or recommend a piece of content, that does not necessarily mean they like or recommend what that piece of content is about.

Users don't have a choice how this is displayed on their Facebook profiles, and while common sense can ordinarily separate intent of a "like" from the words on the screen, it can still lead to some inappropriate messages:

Chris likes....
In these examples, I don't necessarily like that Corey Haim died and ended up on FamousDead. I don't necessarily like that a Blippy user's credit card number was found in Google again, and I don't necessarily recommend popping pills as a way to boost brain power.

You can also get generalizations like, "Chris likes Facebook Developers." Just because I like Facebook's developer channel doesn't mean I like all Facebook developers. There may be a few I specifically don't like, or even loathe.

Chris likes....

People have expressed concern for this in the past, but now that like and recommend buttons are all over the web, you're going to see a lot more inappropriateness than ever before. It's just something for publishers to be aware of (and users for that matter). Perhaps this is something to keep in mind with your titles.

On a related note, lots of people have called for a dislike button for quite some time. There is even an unofficial Firefox extension for it, not to mention a Facebook group. I would imagine more than ever want to see that button now, although that would create a reputation management nightmare for brands.

Marco Spoerrle, MARCO SPOERRLE

Facebook "Likes" Mean More to Businesses Than Just Traffic, Marco Spoerrle

Facebook "Likes" Mean More to Businesses Than Just Traffic, Marco Spoerrle

It's been nearly a week since Facebook rocked the world with its Open Graph announcements, and many of us are still wrapping our heads around all of the implications they have. I don't think there's any dispute that it's a huge move, and that it's important to pay attention to from a business perspective, but just what it means for businesses is still up in the air in some regards. Like Facebook itself, or even social media in general, we're going to see more benefits (and possibly negatives) as time goes on, and more sites and applications harness the power of said Open Graph.

As those wheels turn in our heads, there is plenty of discussion already happening around the subject - not just the Open Graph and the issues related to it (open web ramifications, privacy, etc), but how we can indeed take advantage of it.

Traffic

In a recent article we talked about why Facebook's Open Graph and particularly its social plug-ins will be good to drive traffic. It's pretty straightforward. The like and recommendation buttons are essentially different versions of the share buttons that people have been using to drive traffic for quite some time. The main difference is that instead of only showing up in the news feed only disappear shortly thereafter, they will remain on the user's profile page for people to see in the future - a fixed link to your content.







Marco Spoerrle, MARCO SPOERRLE

Sonntag, 11. April 2010

Report: Singapore to Soon Get a Facebook Office, Marco Spoerrle

Marco Spoerrle
MarcoSpoerrle.com

Report: Singapore to Soon Get a Facebook Office

April 8th, 2010

By Chris Morrison 1 Comment » Share
Following a string of other expansions this year, Facebook has moved to set up its latest outpost in Singapore. The company has registered its name, rented offices and listed a half-dozen positions with the intention of of opening the office this summer, according to Channel NewsAsia.
The new positions will be in sales and business development, suggesting that Facebook may have settled on the city-state to support its growing user base in nearby countries like Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines, all of which are among the ten fastest growers according to our March statistics.
Singapore also looks like a strategic choice accounting for the satellite office that Facebook anounced it would be opening in Hyderabad, India in mid-March. Taken together, the two offices should be able to serve most of the rapidly-growing audience in Asia, while the fairly cosmopolitan cities that Facebook has chosen should help it find multi-lingual staff. The report says that Facebook currently has six local job listings, “largely in business and sales develoment;” it cites a local publication’s source suggesting that Facebook will begin Singapore operations in ” the middle of the year.”
For the moment, hiring local developers doesn’t seem to be on Facebook’s slate, although it recently bought Malaysia-based contact importer Octazen, whose two employees continue to work from that country.
The initial number of people Facebook is hiring for the entire Asian region is probably pretty small, but the social network may find reason to expand it soon. The current Facebook audience of about 85 million people in the region may quadruple by next year, according to our Global Monitor stats (we’ll be covering Asia again next Tuesday).
Other recent expansions for Facebook include a larger European advertising presence, the purchase of a second building near its headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif., and the opening of a new 200-person office in Austin, Tex.

Marco Spoerrle
MarcoSpoerrle.com


Facebook’s Multi-Prong Mobile Strategy Pays Off With Significant Traffic Growth, Marco Spoerrle

By Eric Eldon Add Comment » Share
[Editor's Note: The following article is from Inside Facebook Gold, our new data and analysis membership service tracking Facebook's business and growth. In addition to monthly data updates, Inside Facebook Gold presents weekly in-depth analysis articles exploring the most critical developments impacting the future of the Facebook ecosystem. Click here to learn more.]
Around 100 million of Facebook’s more than 400 million users access the service through a mobile device every month. Even though that’s a fraction of the estimated four billion mobile phone subscribers in the world, it’s a much bigger number than most people realize, and amounts to a massive global mobile operation.
However, unlike other services attempting to create a pure-play mobile social networking service, Facebook’s goal is to be much more than a social network on your phone. It is competing with a wide range of leading technology companies in trying to be the main way that you consume and share information, which is something Google and many other companies are also focused on doing.
Will users five years from now use Facebook to find nearby locations, for example, or Google, or Yelp or Bing, or something else? What app will they use to see which businesses their friends frequent, or find the location of an event they’re on the way to attend? How will they share photos? Think about the main use cases for mobile and Facebook is already in some way trying to meet them on the web.
Google’s strategy, most notably, has been to build mobile services that complement its search and advertising business, from mobile ads to maps to Gmail, and to promote everything through its Android mobile-focused operating system. Yahoo is busy providing its own mobile apps, as are other internet media companies. Apple, Microsoft and other platform providers distribute their own apps, too.
Facebook, instead, is trying to do anything it can to extend its real-world social graph and simple communication features using the mobile web and basically every mobile operating system. Whether or not that turns out to be what most mobile users prefer, its positioning in the mobile market is unique. As it has on the web, it hopes that it can be a new and valuable “social operating system” that co-exists with multiple platforms, and increases the reach and relevancy of its advertising services, growing other revenue streams as a result.
As with the launch of basic applications like Photos and Events, and its developer platform, years ago, you can see Facebook looking at key types of apps and services that it can provide for mobile users. Location, as a concept, is widely available as a key feature on a range of location-based check-in games like Foursquare, Gowalla, Loopt and Booyah’s My Town, not to mention Google’s Latitude. But Facebook has been working on providing location-based services for a long time. At this point the company appears likely to release some functionality as a new part of its platform — likely a way for third-party applications to easily share location information back and forth with Facebook’s service.
The examples of Photos and Events are instructive for how Facebook hopes to approach mobile features like location. Other photo-sharing and events-planning sites became popular before Facebook existed, for example, but by making apps for photos and events itself, Facebook has become the market leader in these areas by tying those apps to its social graph and giving them special access to users.
How Facebook is Going After Mobile
Facebook has been available in various mobile forms for a long time — but the company has steadily come out with more ways to access the service via mobile platforms over the years since the site first launched in 2004.
In 2006, Facebook launched a mobile site, at m.facebook.com, that simplifies the web site interface so it will load quickly on a variety of devices’ web browsers and data connection speeds. The company has been experimenting with ways of getting itself on to devices, including ill-fated ones from earlier this decade like the Helio.
After the iPhone first launched in 2007, it developed a mobile site designed for its interface. Then it launched a native iPhone app that provided integration with more features, like photos. It also began working with other partners, like Blackberry maker Research in Motion.
In the last couple of years, Facebook has expanded to a wide variety of other devices. As of today, those include INQ, HTC, LG Electronics, Motorola, Palm, RIM, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, T-Mobile’s Sidekick, and phones powered by Microsoft’s Windows Mobile operating system.
Facebook either works with the hardware manufacturer to develop a standard application to run on all devices, as it did with Palm, or builds its own, like on the iPhone. In other cases, the manufacturer will create their own version of the app for a specific device, like Nokia has with its N97.
Native apps tend to work better than the mobile web services, because they are less reliant on a constant data connection for things like loading parts of the site interface. They provide a better user experience for people on Facebook, so the company has done whatever it can to take itself to those users. In perhaps the most prominent example of this, Facebook uses technology from mobile download store GetJar on m.facebook.com to detect when a native app is available for the user on the mobile site. It then directs the user to download the appropriate app.
Facebook has continued expanding its web-based mobile services even more, however. One example is a version designed for the iPod Touch, at touch.facebook.com. Another is a new site it has planned, at zero.facebook.com. It illustrates the other key part of Facebook’s mobile efforts: Relationships with carriers.
Facebook has actively worked with more than 180 carriers in 32 countries to form various distribution partnerships. Many of these carriers are in parts of the world where mobile devices are far more common than computers. Facebook has already been providing simplified text messaging services, for example, where users can send and receive status updates and take other actions on Facebook via text. You can see all sorts of carrier implementations around the world today. Telcel, a leading Latin American carrier, has a mobile site and messaging service designed specifically for helping users upload photos, status updates and other content they create to Facebook and other sites from their phones.
Zero is a text-only version of Facebook that carriers can provide users for free. If users decide they want the multimedia version of Facebook for doing things like sharing photos but don’t yet have the necessary data plan, Zero lets carriers include a billing prompt so users can pay for the data service and get the full version.
Facebook’s mobile growth has stayed at around 25% of its overall user base, based on numbers that Facebook has released over the years. Yet some differences are emerging. Some 70% of the service’s 400 million users are outside the US, most in mobile-heavy Europe and Asia, but also across Latin American and Africa. Most users in Indonesia are accessing Facebook on their phones, for example. In the United Kingdom, Facebook was the most popular site for mobile Internet users last December, according to GSMA Mobile Media Metrics; more than a quarter of all cell phone users connect to Facebook with their phones each month in the country and almost half of all mobile Internet minutes were spent on the service.
Today, more people in the US and many other industrialized countries still connect to Facebook on computers than mobile phones. In the short-term, developers and marketers have needed to build with the web experience in mind. But now they’re needing to think about new features that mobile is making possible — like location, which can provide new forms of applications and targeted advertising.
Like Facebook has adapted itself to the massive growth in mobile web usage around the world, so to will companies and other organizations that rely on it to reach users.
Measuring Facebook’s Mobile Traffic
While the company irregularly updates its internal numbers for mobile, we’re able to track some apps and services via our AppData measurement service. Here’s a closer look at some examples.
Facebook’s iPhone app is by far the most popular Facebook mobile app. It has 31.4 million monthly active users as of today, 10 percent of whom have joined in the past month — while the app has been growing steadily, its numbers are looking particularly good now. And not just in terms of MAU. It has 16.0 million daily active users, so more than 50 percent of all users access the app every day. Note that this traffic includes both the iPhone and the iPod Touch, as both use the same application, although it doesn’t include touch.facebook.com.

The Blackberry app is also one of the most popular. It has fewer MAU than the iPhone app, at 15.9 million, 1 million of whom joined in the last month. But it also has relatively higher engagement, with 9.65 million people using it every day, or 61% of all MAU.

Finally, we also track the m.facebook.com site, as it’s officially listed as an app on the platform. Even though Facebook is using this site to direct people to download native apps for their devices, the site continues to grow — by 1.7 million users this past month. It now has 19.8 million MAU and 7.76 million DAU; like the two apps above, it brings back an abnormally large amount of users every day, or 39% of them.


Expect Facebook to Focus More on Mobile

Facebook has made a big organizational commitment to mobile in the past few years, and we expect it to put even more resources towards mobile in the future. Key parts of its strategy are already visible. The company will continue to try to cut deals with carriers around the world, as it has already, to get itself as integrated as possible into every device available. While the company has only spoken briefly about Zero, the feature is part of Facebook’s effort to adapt itself to tough computing environments (another example is its simplified web site, Lite). Zero could play a major part in helping Facebook make deals with carriers who are not using Facebook, or doing so minimally, as it promises to help them sell more data services. Finally, we expect Facebook to continue building apps for smartphones and other high-end devices.
Other innovations, like location, look promising — but Facebook needs to continue making its mobile service popular for those to be valuable, so doing so will be its main focus.
This article is from Inside Facebook Gold, our new data and analysis membership service tracking Facebook’s business and growth. In addition to monthly data updates, Inside Facebook Gold presents weekly in-depth analysis articles exploring the most critical developments impacting the future of the Facebook ecosystem. Click here to learn more.

Marco Spoerrle
MarcoSpoerrle.com

Marco Spoerrle: Offerpal Expands to More Non-Traditional and Overseas Payment Options

By Chris Morrison Add Comment » Share
When Offerpal started out a couple years back, it was focused exclusively on online surveys and marketing offers. That’s no longer the case, as last year the company joined the race to become a full-fledged payment platform offering dozens of ways for users to send money to application and game owners.
Its latest raft of additions, announced this week, includes three payment options targeted at children and teens, including those overseas. For the US, Offerpal has partnered with BillMyParents, which lets kids tap into their parent’s credit cards with direct supervision, and Rixty, which uses existing ATMs and convenience stores to let kids pay for online credits in cash. In Asia, Offerpal has added MyCard, which sells gift cards throughout Asia.
Three other new OfferPal partners don’t specifically target kids. For the world market, it has added ClickandBuy, which lets users pay in 120 different currencies, while in Europe Offerpal has added Paysafecard, another pre-paid card. And for the US, the company now has STi prepaid cards.
Over time, the so-called “payment wall” loaded up by Offerpal for users should cater to just about anyone; in fact, it’s hard to imagine that anyone in the US would be terribly hard-pressed to figure out one way or another to pay for a virtual good or service, including the private virtual currency that Offerpal launched last August.
The picture overseas is more fragmented, but Offerpal is at least addressing the major markets of Europe and Asia. As each of the various payment companies fills out its wall of offerings, we’ll begin seeing them battling over finer points in their business models — which is probably why Offerpal also just hired Alex Brutin, who has previous experience with both Google Checkout and PayPal, as a new VP of business development.
Offerpal also just acquired TapJoy in March, which is part of a separate-but-similar move into mobile monetization for the company.

Marco Spoerrle,
MarcoSpoerrle.com

Marco Spoerrle - Facebook’s Search Traffic Continues to Grow

By Chris Morrison
The latest ComScore numbers for the search market reveal an interesting fact: Facebook’s search query volume is rapidly approaching that of the smallest major search engine, Ask. Citi Group, in its own take on ComScore’s numbers, noted Facebook’s 647 million queries in March, which was in turn picked up by Liz Gannes at GigaOm.
That number is equal to about 2.7 percent of all searches performed in the U.S. market — a big number, especially for a company whose business isn’t really search at all. But with almost half a billion users trying to find their way around an ever more sprawling social network, there’s a real need for all those queries.
Measuring Facebook against, say, Microsoft’s Bing does sound like an apples-and-oranges comparison at first. Then again, ignoring the site would create an excessively narrow definition of what search is. It’s not unheard of for large destination sites to become search portals of a sort; YouTube, for example, serves as a portal for a lot of kids, some of whom will go straight to the video site when they need to look up something. Over the years, YouTube has grown big enough that it can actually serve a general search audience, especially with the help of content creators like Demand Media.
The purpose of search on Facebook is a bit more narrow. People tend to be searching for something in particular: a person, a group, an event or an application. Yet over time, if Facebook becomes a central location for those categories of information, it could end up drawing traffic away from the dedicated search engines.
Of course, we all know there’s a lot of money to be made in search, and it’s not hard to imagine how Facebook could successfully seed some results with sponsored results, and create another revenue stream.
In fact, the company is already starting to take advantage of this, via its strategic partnership with Microsoft. Right now, it is running links to Bing web results for searches made on the site, recently tweaking this interface to make Bing more prominent by adding the the official logo. But that’s just the start. The companies also plan to use Facebook data to improve the relevancy Bing’s own search results, and Microsoft is handling search ads on Facebook. While these initiatives are not too far along yet, they could make Facebook search even more significant.