Terrence Russell published an excellent and candid article in the Wired Blog Network called “Facebook Rolls Out Highly Targeted Viral Ad System”. Here’s an excerpt:
I sent him the below response recently as I’m interested in hearing his views on if the Social Networking public will accept this continued evolution of private blog-like network pages to public advertising platforms. I have conversations with designer and IA/Strategy friends quite frequently and, on the reverse side, discuss viral and non-traditional marketing opportunities with clients on almost a weekly basis (where much of emphasis is placed on blogs, Facebook, Linked In, Google Groups and other social networking ventures).
I’m under the impression, though, that this gravitation toward social networking sites for promotional opportunities is going to hit a ceiling. While it seems to have no limit of potential at this point, users may start to feel that MySpace may soon be TheirSpace, recognizing that all they are is, as you eloquently put it, “a shill.” Social Networking sites are hallowed ground. Users that have no interest in blogs or tumblrs use it to create an online version of themselves (the predecessor of Second Life’s avatar) where they can color, type and exist on screen. Their friends are their friends (their featured friends are their featured friends), their posts and images and videos are unique to them. They can even bastardize the MySpace or Friendster layout to reflect how indy or hip or trendy or ghetto they are in real life. But when the Google Text Ads give way to image ads, the images to flash, the flash to all-encompassing DHTML layered “pop-ups”, their individuality is obscured and their personality becomes the property of whomever is renting space on their page.
I may be completely wrong, but I feel that in order for social networking sites to retain their growth, advertisers have to continue to be subtle. I see you use GMail for your mail account and I’m assuming part of that reason is that it’s a mail program that, with technological bells and whistles, doesn’t detract from your purpose there. I bet you chose it over Hotmail because you can log-in without seeing a dozen ads, browse your mail without seeing a few more, and log-out without being brought to another dozen. If you did use Hotmail before, you’re thankful to only see a few small Google text ads and have no intention of going back.When Google creates their new almighty social networking site (not orkut, the new one) what is the chance that die-hard Facebook users will make the same decisions you made when you chose GMail?
I’d love to hear your thoughts on this.
Your reader,
Don
What do you guys think? Am I being paranoid or is this trend going to kill social networking? Do you agree that people will gravitate toward add-free initiatives like Google’s new SN site?
Article on Google SN