Convergence Emergence

What’s old and what’s new in social network services

February 1, 2008 · Leave a Comment

When thinking about social network services (SNS), what do most people have in mind? MySpace, Facebook and Bebo may well come quickly to mind. What is it that SNS do? What probably comes to mind are activities like sharing a personal profile, posting photos, videos, and music, writing about shared interests, organising social activities (like parties!). Some may reflect back on several years of blogging, where knowledge is shared and created through online collaboration. I’ve heard about 15 year-olds in Melbourne, Australia swapping their social network address first, mobile phone number second.

The growth in SNS has been rapid and global.  According to ComScore ’hundreds of millions of people around the world are visiting social network sites each month and many are doing so on a daily basis”.

That’s a very potted history of SNS use. So what’s emerging? Quite a lot actually. Here some examples:

  • Loomia lets readers of online media (who are also Facebook users) see a list of recommended news articles referred by their Facebook ‘friends’.
  • eFans is a social network for sports fans (combining a sports portal and social network).
  • MySpace and the BBC have annouced a partnership  to enable MySpace users to share some of the BBC’s programs by embedded them into their personalised profile pages. Imagine the potenial for viral distribution through network effects…and if a ‘big hit’ occurred…what that would do hasten the shift from mainstream to online TV.
  • MySpace as well as Facebook have opened up their sites to third-party developers…adding fuel to the pace of innovation.
  • Bebo has partnered with UK and USA broadcasters to provide professional media companies and individual users the opportunitiy to create and upload their own content, and monetise content through serving and selling their own advertising.
  • Professionals have started using LinkedIn as their sole contacts repository.

Common threads here are the SNS’s are shaping up to be integrated hubs for individuals and their extended networks to connect, communicate and to access and share tailored news, information and entertainment.  Advertising is moving online to SNS as well as search.  Mainstream media is moving online via SNS - not migrating so much as complementing traditional broadcast services.

What may well lie on the horizon? I would suggest embedded voice, video as well as text, IM and chat; communication between virtual and real identities.

Seems to me that social network services are shaping up to be drivers of innovation and substitute/preferred services for social and entertainment needs – and business knows it!

Categories: Emerging business models · Social networks
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