Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

Trends from Randi Zuckerberg, Former Director of Marketing at Facebook

Randi Zuckerberg, former Marketing Director at FacebookLast month I had the opportunity to meet and hear Randi Zuckerberg speak at Meredith College. Randi was visiting the campus to receive the President’s Award and deliver the 2012 Woman of Achievement Lecture. Prior to the event I was able to attend the VIP reception thanks to my wife (@mcdezigns) who won the Meredith Facebook contest.

Randi Zuckerberg is the former head of marketing at Facebook and brother to Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook founder and the next american billionaire. She left her advertising agency job to work with Mark when he was at Harvard to help him launch Facebook and was with the company until last fall. During her tenure she was able to see the development of Facebook and help with the launch of several of the platforms features.

Randi stated that she changes her presentation based on current trends and that it can change on a monthly basis. The top trends she discussed were:

  • The sharing economy: social media has created a more caring community that shares resources instead of hoarding them.
  • People as platforms: the ability for individuals to generate a fan followiong rapidly.
  • Gamification of health and fitness: apps like Gym-Pact reward healthy behavior.
  • Crowdsourcing: Kickstart is funding more projects than the NEA. Logos and corporate identity are being generated by sites like 99 Designs.
  • Cover photos are making statements: people and brands are having fun with photos and creating a billboard type impression on Facebook. Examples include Girl Scout Cookies and Obama’s campaign pages.
  • Mobile first: new technology is being designed only for use as a mobile app without a formal website. These new apps are building one use case really well versus a whole site.
  • Curation is creating experts from individuals that never write, paint or create unique content. Sites like Pinterest allow users to create a strong following based off their taste not their own content.
  • Creating social moments: what if you could recreate the Home Shopping Network within Facebook with real time stats on friends purchases?
  • The opportunity to create more social moments via live blogging (which I wish I had known that there was WiFi at the event, I would have live blogged this post!).
  • Philanthropy is offering brands the opportunity to dip their toes into social media by matching contributions or having contests. Target asked its fans to pick which charity they would give their annual donation to by voting on Facebook.

Overall I was very impressed with Randi both on a personal and professional level. She was very approachable when I had the opportunity to meet her before the event and I enjoyed discussing strategy with her. After seeing her speak to the crowd you could tell that she was a savvy marketing professional that understood that technology is cool but you need to provide value. Technology for wow factor fades fast.

I would like to thank Meredith College for bringing Randi to the Triangle as the event was free to the public.

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6 Content Curation Tools For Your Daily Digital Diet

You hear that content is king and the latest curations applications and tools allow you to take advantage of the content kings to manage your daily diet of news and information.  With the large volumes of content being produced today by everyone from the major networks, businesses and local bloggers and enthusiasts, individuals have a huge amount of content to curate and share with others.  RSS readers where the early innovators in curating the constant firehouse of information into our shotglass attention span but they were cumbersome and text heavy.

A few years ago I wrote about how aggregators like NetVibes and Pageflakes were allowing us to create mash up pages in minutes.  These tools are great for listening stations and but lack the intelligence that the new generation of curation tools offer.  These tools are also driving clicks like never before. These curation tools are helping us fill Facebook and Twitter streams, driving significant traffic volume, making corporate brands take notice.  I’ve even noticed how Delicious has updated their interface since the last update a few months ago with the release of stacks.

Scoop.it

Scoop.it is a nice tool to gather and distribute content from around the Web based on your interests and passions.  Scoop.it creates a page with previews and links to content you “scoop”and has good community tools for following other curators. Most of these sites have the ability to “Re” post content another user has already flagged.  Scoop.it has some great B2B curators in specific vertical markets and found it to be good resource to gather industry-specific content.

Scoop It website allows for content curation

Marty Smith's "Business Intelligence Revolution" on Scoop.it

Paper.li

Paper.li seems to be the most used of the content curation tools among people I follow on Twitter and probably has the most traffic of any This site has really done the best job of attracting uses and generating links. The aspect of publishing a daily paper based off your articles of interest and giving recognition for the source as a key contributors via Twitter is both annoying and brilliant. Even though I don’t want a daily paper for myself I find myself clicking through to friends papers and enjoying the clean interface.  And if you use Paper.li change your title to differentiate the daily tweets other than the typical tweets of “The YOUR NAME HERE Daily is out…”

Paper.ly Daily Newspaper Style Curation Site

Phil Buckley's "The 1918 Daily Amalgamation" on Paper.ly

Pinterest

Pinterest is the latest media story as it started popping into the list of sites driving the most traffic on the internet last month.  For the most part the initial growth was driven by women using it as a virtual scrapbook for visual items of interest such as clothes, interior design and food.  Pintrest is one part bookmarking and one part image gallery with a clean interface that allows you to create a more engaging curation.  You can only “pin” images to a board, but the link is preserved to allow for the click thereby driving traffic to the source site.  Also other community members can post comments similar to Facebook wall posts threads.  Pinterest is different from traditional bookmarking sites like Delicious, Digg and StumbleUpon in that it pins an image, movie or other media object with link to page.  However the ability to visually scan designs and rich media content is very nice.

Pinterest is driving major traffic and users to create electronic pinboards

Zite

My wife @MCDezigns showed Zite to me and we both love it.  Zite not only has the best content for what I’m interested in reading it also has great one-click bookmarking, easy social sharing with flexibility using multiple accounts.  I recently downloaded the iPhone app and use it everyday to quickly scan articles of interest and either read or bookmark them to read later in the day.  Zite has simple thumbs up/down approval tool similar to Pandora to customize your content.  The stream will even draw from your social stream with lesser presence than Flipboard.  Zite has a large library of Sections to choose from and they have groomed their content well in terms of quality and frequency.

Zite seems to have the best content and overall user experience.

Flipboard

Flipboard definetly captured everyones attention when iPads first came out.  Using simple swipe navigation it offers a great magazine of news and social media content.  For social media content I like how photos are previewed in larger sizes and it’s easier to view photos than on your Facebook wall or Twitter stream as well as photos sites like Instagram.  The latest release allows for multiple accounts so that you can share on iPad for multiple users as well as new iPhone version.

Flipboard creates personalized magazine of content from news sources and social media

Google Currents

The latest entry tinto the curation space is Google Currents. Matching the new Google interface design it works best with Google+ but has sharing and bookmarking integration. No doubt that curation and clicks resulting from Google Current users are are going to factor into how the Google ranking juice is made.  Currents has a library of major content sites as well as the ability to pull from any RSS feed in your Google Reader.  There is also a trending list of links that you can browse that is similar to search results you would see in the “News” result of a Google Search.  The clean interface and design is similar to Flipboard and Zite with the ability to simply swipe between pages and topics.  What I think Google should have done was skip the redesign of Google Reader and instead migrated it into Currents with a website interface.

Google Currents offers library of content sources and trending stream

The last three tools listed here are only avaiable as a tablet or smartphone app. Scoop.it, Paper.ly and Pinterest all offer websites to create your pages and manage your account.  These tools have bookmarklets and other simple tools to tag a page and categorize the content.

What’s your content curation tool of choice?

How Online Marketing Drives Offline Success Infographic

This infographic from KISSmetrics shows and provides case studies on how online marketing can drive offline sales.  It’s a great starting point when working with all types of business, large and small to determine where to start your digital and social media planning to meet business goals.

Click on the graphic below for an enlarged view:

online offline social media

View an enlarged version of this Infographic »
 

About The Author: Sean Work is the marketing coordinator at KISSmetrics. Follow him on twitter (@seanvwork) and ask him for a free cup of coffee :)

Digital Healthcare Animated Infographic

Found a great animated infographic on the role and impact of digital marketing in healthcare on Life Healthcare Agency’s YouTube Channel. This video does a great job of communicating the importance of digital communications in how we research and discover health information. It follows great storytelling practices by:

  • Creating a compelling argument for the role of digital communications and social networks using user and traffic statistics.
  • Establishing that healthcare as a topic is huge in volume: 2nd most search topic on google and 3rd largest web activity across generations.
  • The physician survey data displays how doctors are using digital media to research and learn about practices and medicine.
  • Consumer research shows how web research can lead to patient asking doctor for a branded drug.

The closing message “healthcare is digital…life is digital” shows how we are becoming a digital nation more every day.  Plus I really like the use of Lego people!

Facebook vs. Google+ Infographic

No Comments » Written on July 11th, 2011 by
Categories: Infographics, Social Media

InfoGraphic - Facebook vs Google+Great initial comparison of Facebook and Google+ features, privacy and sharing settings.  Early reviews on Google+ are favorable with its simple and clean design. Source: TechnoBombs

The Google+ Project: Should I Stay or Should I Go?

The Google+ Project, will it last?Google announced its latest entry into social networking this week with The Google+ Project.  Today I received an invite to join the network and find myself at a difficult decision. Should I create an account, link to friends and create another online presence? Or should I wait and see if this sticks?  Part of me wants to see what it is and how it works.  For work I need to have a basic understanding of how social networks influence digital marketing campaigns.

On the other hand will this network be around in a year? Google’s past social media efforts failed.  Google Buzz was poorly released and automatically pulled all your contacts into it with little warning.  Then if you wanted to kill your account it had reprucussions with other aspects of your Google account so you felt a bit trapped.  Google Wave was release with much anticipation and killed off quickly, even though you can still access the site.  Like a fine wine, it needed some time to breathe and that did not happen.  I know many people will say that it was around a year which in “internet time” is like 10 years but that’s nonsense.  Wave had some great collaboration features and had a confusing launch to say the least.

As a marketing person I have to ask why Google has decided to create a competitor to Facebook.  I know they are battling for website traffic and users.  But part of me wants to say to Google, “stick to what you know and do best!”  Search, analytics and collaboration tools are where Google shines.  Users go to Google to search, use GMail to communicate, store and share documents on Google Docs and research and track site traffic with AdWords and Analytics.  Do people really want to go to Google to share their photos, short messages, what they had for dinner and other minutua we see on Facebook and Twitter all day?

As users do we really want to have another Facebook?  I think one is enough for me to keep track of and update.  LinkedIn is great for business and I use Twitter to keep informed and update to date on specific topics and communities of friends and others.  I’ve enjoyed connecting with people on Facebook.  It’s clean, easy to use interface has made it simple  to connect with friends and family that I don’t get to see in person as often as I would like.  It’s more social than LinkedIn or Twitter.  There is critical mass there that allows us to connect with a large portion of our community.  Heck no system is perfect and I have several friends and family that Facebook is not a great connector as they are not present or active enough to have a relationship on the platform.

My guess, and I hope I’m wrong, is that Google won’t get a gazillion users on it in less than a year.  They will deem it a failure and proably pull the plug.  If so will it affect my Google contacts and other account features like Buzz does?  If that’s the case then I’m less likely to join it.  Do I create a basic presence there just to have an understanding of Google’s social network platform? Will it be worth my time or just another place to update what I’m doing?

So I’m back to my original question: Should I Google+ or Should I Go?

Does Selling Out Kill Your Brand?

No Comments » Written on March 29th, 2011 by
Categories: Digital Media, Social Media, Strategy

MySpace RIPMySpace and FriendFeed were early social platforms that grew their community and eventually found their respective suitors.  But was acquisition the kiss of death to these companies?  It seems that after they get their payday these companies are forgotten by their new owners for several reasons.

FriendFeed was supposed to be the Twitter killer for Facebook. FriendFeed is a service which, instead of layering a meta-network on top of all your other social networks, will create a news feed incorporating them all much like the Facebook news feed.  FriendFeed was acquired by Facebook in August of 2009.

By providing a microblogging platform to Facebook, it appeared that it would compete for the 140 character crowd and challenge Twitter.  But it never happened.  In fact Facebook’s integration of FriendFeed into its status updates never materialized and unique visitor traffic to the site has dropped from 800K visitors to 200K over the past year.  With Facebook’s recent acquisition of Beluga, FriendFeed’s days may be over.

MySpace had it’s big payday with Fox. After purchasing the number one social network in 2005 for $508 million It became a lonely stepchild in the Fox family.  Once the king of the social media networks, it’s growth has declined over the past few years as Facebook’s has grown.  Recently Fox announced that it was planning on shutting Even though it has more users than Facebook, its growth has stalled and now Fox is looking to shut it down by this June.

So what happened?  First and foremost when companies get bought out for a big payday like these two there is some loss of talent via attrition.  The new owners are challenged to find new creative leaders and must integrate the new company into their corporate culture.  This was the case when Macromedia and Adobe merged, although Adobe was the larger, more established company, Macromedia’s culture became the dominating force in the new organization.  Failure to integrate properly can stifle creativity and hurt the product or service.

Another factor can be that the new owner does not understand the business model of the acquired company.  In the case of Fox they wanted to get advertising revenue but ignored the user experience and how to grow the community. As traffic to the site declined so did ad revenue.  Leaving Fox with a property that is dying.

Maybe Groupon and Facebook have the right formula.  Stay private and keep the quality of your product high and continue to evolve the user experience.

Facebook’s New Best Friend? The Gap!

Gap Free Jeans Check In Facebook Places Page

The Gap's Free Jeans Coupon on Facebook Places

Last week The Gap announced that they were giving away 10,000 pairs of jeans to anyone who checked in to their stores on Facebook.  All you had to do was show your check-in screen on your mobile device to redeem the coupon.  I headed over to The Gap at 11 AM last Friday to see if I could be one of the lucky 10,000.  I was unable to be there when the store opened as I was co-hosting the Movember-thon from 10-11 AM.  By the time I got to the store they had already given out the free jeans. In fact, the store clerk informed me that there was a line at the door when the store opened at 10 AM and they only have 7 pairs of free jeans to give away.

Was I disappointed? No, because at the same time The Gap was offering 40% off any regular price item for anyone showing their check in screen.  Since I was at the store and needed a pair of jeans I decided to try some on.  Now I’m not a fashionista, so I usually buy Levis jeans and my last purchase was at BJ’s Wholesale Club.  Therefore I would not normally spend $50 on jeans, but with the 40% off the jeans were more around $33 which is  what I’m willing to pay.  Big win for The Gap, they got me in the store and I made a purchasing decision that I would not have normally done.  Also my wife went with me and bought an item at 40% off as well as showed me a second item that she liked that I plan to go back and purchase.  To top it off the store clerk gave me coupons valid on Wednesdays and Thursdays, low traffic days.

So even though I and many others wrote about The Gap changing their logo and how the decision seemed ill advised, I am more convinced than ever that it was all a stunt.  I cannot believe that The Gap was going to change their logo to something that looked like a 5th grader’s first forway into layout software.  Either way it does not really matter as this week’s discussion is about how brilliant the free jeans campaign was.  Not only did they redeem themselves among marketing pundits and regular customers, they also accomplished something that the Facebook executives are loving.  They demonstrated how to use the Facebook Places mobile application work for location based marketing.

Facebook Places Screen

Facebook Places Shows Special Offers

When I checked into Facebook places I noticed that the screen looked different.  Luckily I downloaded the latest update earlier in the week so I could see the coupons icon next to the store name.  As I walked out of The Gap I started to look at the different offers each store had.  Some offered 20% off coupons, others would donate to a specific charitable cause with a certain purchase.  I was intrigued as I’m not a big shopper and if I can find a deal it makes me more likely to purchase.  I used to be an impulse buyer but in recent years have overcome that habit.

So in a single campaign The Gap not only redeemed itself but they also were able to make more Facebook users aware of how location based services (LBS) can provide value beyond checking in.  I have tried several of the LBS and only found a few that provided value. For instance I like Yelp because it has reviews to gauge the quality of the retailer as well as will search nearby locations for food or nightlife as well as link to directions. Some other LBS allow companies to offer specials but sometimes that requires additional promotions either on social networks, advertising or traditional store signage.

When Facebook initially launched Places I thought it was very lacking of value.  All I could do was check in and there was not much value.  Now with the addition of real time specials and offers, Places has become a game changer.  Savvy retailers will flock to Facebook Places and an opportunity to put a special offer in front of a potential or returning customer in real time.  True that many social snobs, including myself, may snub Facebook and deplore their privacy issue, but we’re a small percentage of consumers.  The remaining 80-90% of users don’t care and will continue to use Facebook as their primary social network.  And now checking in on Facebook provides value by offering immediate financial savings. LBS service providers no doubt took note of this past weekends activities and are trying to figure out how to compete against the world’s largest social network.

An interesting statistic will be what the uptick in Gap’s sales were from the campaign. I would also be interested in other retailers seeing sales surge from Facebook places.

There have been some great posts on this campaign from local bloggers that I enjoyed reading that you should review:

Using Social Media to Promote Events

Social Media can be a great tool to promote events.  Depending on your strategy and audience it allows you to quickly reach your audience with a direct targeted message.  By no means should you solely rely on social media for event promotion.  Direct marketing, email marketing, advertising and other forms of marketing communications should be considered and deployed if applicable.

Before using social media for event promotion, have a strategy in place.  Deb Orton (@deb_orton) and Meg Crawford (@postgrad) of SAS (@SASsoftware) recently wrote a great blog post on this.  You should review their advice and determine if social media is the right communication channel for your audience.  If they are, then you can take advantage of the tips and tricks in this post.  Before you start you need to have the following marketing pieces in place:

  1. A landing page that describes the event, lists the agenda, value proposition and link to registration processes.  Even if you don’t have online registration, have a PDF form or something in place to make it easy for people to register.
  2. Keywords for your event.  Review the event description and pull out 10-20 keywords that are applicable to the event content and purpose.
  3. Short summaries of 75 words or less.  Many people don’t read, they scan.  So have your message sell your event in the first 50-75 words.  Don’t bore them with details that can be read after they have registered unless it’s very important.
  4. Pricing information and if there are different pricing levels for members versus non-members and any cut-off dates for early registration discounts.  If you sell them on attending your event the first questions always is how much?
  5. Logistics around event date, time, location and directions if necessary.  Don’t leave it up to the attendee to figure out the details, have them ready for them.

Now that you have your prep work done it’s time to push your message out using the three biggest social networks!

Twitter

Twitter can be a great tool for spreading the word about your event.  If you have a large Twitter following great.  If not then this is an opportunity to grow your reach.  With the 140 character limit, Twitter can be challenging to get your information out and include registration link, hash tags and the event date.

I prefer to use a tool like Hootsuite or Tweetdeck to schedule my event tweets.  Typically I have a schedule in place for distribution.  If I have 4 weeks to promote the event I schedule messages to go out every Monday, Wednesday and Friday leading up to the event.  For the last day of early bird, discount registration I customize the message to say Last day at reduced rate… or Early bird price ends today….

You should write three versions of your message.  The reason being is that it changes up your Twitter stream and looks more original than just sending out the same message a dozen times.  Also you can change out keywords to attract different audiences if needed.  Here’s a sample from recent event I did for Triangle AMA.

Sample of using different copy for the same event

Change your copy to keep your message fresh

The second major factor in using Twitter to push out your event is to track your links and clicks.  I use bit.ly for a couple of reasons.  First is that its tracking is great and easy to use.  Second is that I can easily keep the same link whereas ow.ly will change your link for each schedule tweet even though the destination is still the same.   Note that ow.ly is the default for Hootsuite.  Bit.ly will also let you customize your link so I could have named this link something like .  But be cautious in doing this because once you create the custom link it’s used up and cannot be used for another future unique link.

Hootsuite has a nice feature that allows you to save drafts of your tweet.  I use this to save my three unique tweets and then select the drafts to schedule my outgoing tweets over the next few weeks.

LinkedIn

Although LinkedIn Groups do not allow you to create an event within the group, a feature I would love to see, you can create a LinkedIn Event and email to your contacts.  Creating an event in LinkedIn is very simple and straightforward.  You simply go to the Events link on LinkedIn and select Add an Event tab.  You will then be able to enter your event information in the form provided.  The basic fields include:

  • Event Title
  • Date & Time (make sure you put in your end time)
  • Venue Name
  • Location (physical address)
  • Website (put your landing page URL here, not your main website unless that is where you want to direct attendees)

You will see a small plus (+) sign with the words Add more details. Click on that link to add additional information including:

  • Additional venue address information (city, state, zip)
  • Description (This is where you want the 75 word description.  LinkedIn will display the first 300 characters of this field and then show link to "see more".)
  • Event Type (You are limited to the pull down menu choices here.)
  • Industry (Same as Event Type, you must select from their choices in the pull down menu.)
  • Keywords (Here’s where you put the keywords mentioned in the prep section.  This is important for those searching LinkedIn for events.)
  • Who should attend? (I tend to put a few titles in this box.  I don’t know how effective or how this field is really used.  I would not waste too much time putting in several levels of the same profession.)
  • Organization (Who is managing or sponsoring the event?)

At the end of this section, you are asked if you are attending.  The next line ask if you are organizing.  You should check Yes to one of these fields for reasons explained in the next step.  If you check Yes to the organizing question you can also enter the cost to attend as well as info on ticket sales, if the event repeats and who, if anyone, can edit the event.   In my past experience I have not used these fields for a few reasons.  First  is that my events have multiple fees based on registration date and member status so I don’t want to mislead anyone on cost.  Second is that most of the important information has already been entered and I want the attendee to click through to my event landing page and view these details and register!

After you’ve entered in all your information, you can preview the event or save a draft to come back to it later.  If you are done proofing and all your information is correct you ready for the next step which is to publish and share your event with your LinkedIn connections.  This is why I stated that you should select the attending or organizing check boxes in the previous paragraph.  If I’m going to email my connections about this great event I’m promoting I want them to see that it’s worth my time as well as theirs.  Also I select connections that I think would be interested in the event as well as any sponsors, co-workers, board members, etc.  I don’t send marketing events to my old roommate that is a civil engineer, just like I don’t want to receive his engineering events.  When emailing to your contacts you have the option to hide names which I recommend.  Also you are limited to 50 connections so choose wisely.  I use the By Location and By Industry drop-down menus to filter out non-target connections and if you have a lot of connections it makes the process faster.

At the end of the process you will see your event detail page that looks like the example below.

This is what your LinkedIn event summary page looks like

Facebook

If you have a Facebook fan page for your organization then creating an event is similar to the LinkedIn process.  From the Events tab you click on the Create Event button to start the process.   Facebook does not allow as much content to be entered but that’s OK since you have a landing page to provide that information.  The add event page is shown below:

Add Facebook Event Page

As you can see the amount of information here is limited.  Like LinkedIn always enter an end time.  The What are you planning? field is your event title.  I find that Facebook will sometimes give you an error message that what you entered is not valid.  This usually occurs if you entered more than 10-12 words so keep it brief.  Remember, drive them to the landing page for the details.  The next field allows you to enter location and you can add the street address which you should always do so people can get driving directions.  The More info? field allows you to enter in your 75-word description as well as your link to the landing page.  Facebook with automaticallyly hyperlink the field.  I tend to put the link at both the beginning and end of the description along with Register online at before the link.

The Select Guests button allows you to select contacts and/or fans to invite to the event.  Similar to LinkedIn you should select contacts that are interested in your subject matter.  There is no limit, or at least I have not hit a limit, to the number of guests you can invite.  You can also add a personal message to your invitation if you choose.  There are two check boxes at the end of the form.  I keep both checked as I want people to see who’s registered as a possible draw as well as ask questions or give comments about the event.  If you’re afraid of someone writing something bad on the wall then go back to your social media strategy and make sure you manage your page and this should not be an issue.

With both Facebook and LinkedIn you have the option of editing your event in case of a mistake, change of venue or date or any other situation that may arise.  Facebook also has a link on the event detail page titled Update Fans of Group Name, where you can push the event out to all fans of the group.  Both the edit event and update fans links are on the upper right hand of the event detail page.

That’s it, you’ve now harnessed the power of the three largest and most active social media sites to promote your event.  Be sure to view the Facebook and LinkedIn event pages to see if there are any questions from attendees as well as track RSVPs.  Also track your Twitter links during the promotion to see the volume of traffic and if it peaks or dips from day to day, week to week.

Facebook Mass Exodus? Not So Much!

3 comments Written on June 1st, 2010 by
Categories: Marketing, Social Media

Yesterday was supposed to be the day that Facebook users would delete their accounts in protest of the company’s privacy policy changes over the past several weeks. However according to a post Web Pro News only 34,424 users took the plunge and did just that. I can see a few reasons why this is true.

First most users don’t understand the privacy issue and many don’t care. Social networks are all about connecting and many users want to do just that. By having more open access to their profile they can connect with more users that share common interest and activities. True many savvy users have more restricted access but they are the minority of the Facebook population. Facebook users that are using the social network for business are also eager to be more accessible to generate leads and new business opportunities.

Over the past year Facebook has changed, modified and tweaked its privacy settings. It seems like every time you access the settings it has changed. The frequency that I visit these settings is maybe once a month. My feeling is that most users never revisit their settings once they set up their account and forget about it. Of course this can change if they get too many strange friend requests or suspicious emails from the account.

The other reason many users won’t quit Facebook is the platform itself. Let’s face it how many software platforms have you use that have the breadth and depth of Facebook and are free? Without being a web designer you can have photo albums, video posts, a blog, and links to all your favorite music, movies, restaurants or any other collective “like” page. You can even organize your high school reunion, local sports team fan club or whatever type of group you want to manage with out having to code.

Add onto that the ability to connect with such a large population of friends and other people, Facebook is hard to match. True the new Diaspora Project aims to create the next great social network, but how long with it take them to get 1 million users, much less 400 million users. Are you going to ask your friends to migrate as well? What about your Mom? Facebook has become an easy way for us to share with family members and has replaced the phone calls and extra photos we used to mail and email each other.

I have to admit that I get tired of some of the Facebook minutia of people’s lives. Reconnecting with past friends and co-workers many times has the lifespan of a few days. However for local connections it’s a great way to keep abreast of what’s happening or experience events or other occasions that I may not be able to attend. Even though I’ve said to myself and a few others I want to get rid of my Facebook account just because I don’t want to keep up with it I won’t.

What’s your take on quitting Facebook? Are you upset about the privacy settings or any other facet enough to delete your account? If you did get rid of your account what’s the fallout if any?