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July 2008

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Member since 11/2004

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Second Age of Aquarius: Facebook Connect + Facebook Payments (= Social Sign-on + Viral E-Commerce)

so i went to a Rock Concert Facebook F8 yesterday, and i had a good time. 

Facebookf8concert

yeah sure, the hype machine was in overdrive & some folks were a little underwhelmed (tho others more excited than usual).  Jerry didn't show up, but Zuck was a lot more relaxed than last year, and even cracked a few funny jokes.  he ain't no Steve Jobs yet, but overall it was a good set.  and a few of us not only rocked but grokked the Happy Happy Joy Joy Meaning of It All.

all Love aside tho, we're just beginning the Second Age of Aquarius.

here are 3 Important Signs to recognize on your way to Enlightenment:

Facebookconnect

Sign #1:

Facebook Connect isn't Single Sign-on, it's Social Sign-on.

Facebook Connect is barely arrived, but it's going to change how people think about the usefulness of social networks, and will have a substantial increase on their value in the marketplace.  the FB Connect integrations demo'd yesterday by Digg, SixApart, & CitySearch (wtf? how much did they pay to bump Yelp off stage?) were impressive and very smooth.  I believe most people who saw those demos now recognize the potential for using Facebook as a single sign-on option on many consumer websites. (note: i'm not downplaying the significance of competing alternatives MySpace Data Availability, Google Friend Connect, or even OpenID [tho Dick isn't sure]; they're also relevant.  currently Facebook Connect appears to be the lead horse in the race... but watch closely).

while the topic has been much discussed over the past few months (years even), it seems only a few people really understand the implications of using a social network as single sign-on service.  historically, Microsoft tried to create Passport (aka Hailstorm) as a broad use single sign-on for other non-Microsoft services, but failed rather miserably... in my opinion, as much due to poor UI design as lack of 3rd-party incentive.  the strategy had merit, but the tactics & implementation sucked.  after a blue-streak chair-throwing incident, Marc Lucovsky is now at Google trying one more time.

these days there *are* functional multi-service sign-ons available from Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, & others, but they haven't been widely adopted by many third parties (yet).  OpenID has potential as well, but i don't see it getting traction without major vendor support... and i don't mean just lip service, but also coordinated developer evangelism communication as well.

now the Grand Game is Again Afoot, only this time not just at Microsoft, Google, & Yahoo, but also Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn & other social networks.  Why?  Because while major platform services have ~200M-500M account logins, the primary social networks are also approaching critical mass in #s of users (critical = >100M, roughly speaking).  More importantly social networks don't just have lots of user profile data, they also have functional Friend Lists (with pictures); their users are now socialized and familiar with invitation behavior, and this enables easy viral distribution of content & applications. thus, it's not Single Sign-on, it's Social Sign-on.

Sign #2:

Facebook Payments is Coming... Ready for Social Commerce?

The shoe that *didn't* drop yesterday at F8 was of course Facebook Payments.  It's a poorly-kept secret  Facebook is working hard on their own payment system, and many of us were hoping they would launch it at F8, but alas that rumor was squashed earlier in the week.  Rightly so, payment infrastructure (and fraud prevention that goes along with it) is not something you shove out the door without a lot of testing,  if it's not quite ready for primetime, i'd just as soon they wait a bit longer.  i'd still expect they will ship before end of the year, but i won't hold my breath.

In any case, once they DO ship it's likely there will be considerable interest by the developer community to integrate payments into a number of apps, in the hopes someone will figure out how to make money.  if that scales up, then there is tremendous value in combining an integrated payment service with several hundred million user logins -- each with a hundred or so friends they can share / refer / inform about their favorite new clothes, music, or other commercial goods & services.  want to get a discount on that new iPhone?  invite a friend to buy one too, and hey maybe you both get 20% off.  in other words, this isn't just another e-commerce payment system, it's about Making E-Commerce Viral

Yeah, i know group buying has been tried before, but this time you've got an audience of millions already used to social networks, news feeds, online shopping, & lifestyle transparency... now they're so used to online voyeurism, it's just a matter of time before someone cracks the nut on this one.

Sign #3:

Search Monetization (Future Intent) gives way to Social Commerce (Past Discovery)

Ok i admit, this one is purely speculative.  But it's fun to put on the aluminum foil hat every now & then, and think about how Facebook could beat Google.  It certainly won't happen overnight, and Google is already trying to co-opt Facebook's social mojo, but maybe it's not as crazy as you think.  Up at Foo Camp a few weeks ago, Danny Sullivan moderated a debate between Tim O'Reilly and Mike Arrington about how & why Microsoft/Yahoo should keep trying to fight Google (or not).  While there was a lot of argument on approach, almost no one thought Google could be beaten head-to-head in Search.  In fact the big question was whether there was ANY way to make a dent in Google's dominance in Search at all. 

well i'm here to tell you: there is a way

close your eyes for a second, and i will explain.  (Let Go Luke... Use the Force!)

Let's think about how most people buy stuff in the real world.  Do they do a lot of research?  well, sometimes.  Do they search around & look for the best price, the best deal?  yeah, sometimes they do that too.  Do they typically make the decision all by themselves?  hmmm no, most people don't just depend on their own efforts... they talk to friends & family, and they rely heavily on word of mouth & opinion.  most purchases are social activity: markets are conversations; commerce is communication.

Pigchaircolor1And about all that research... do you really think people LIKE to do that stuff?  Aren't a lot of people really just very lazy?  wouldn't they cop out on all that search & research if they could just see what other people were doing, and copy their behavior?  yeah, that's more like it.  i tell ya... most times i ain't the hard-working little pig that builds his house out of bricks.  i'm the lazy-ass little pig that just wants to find out what the next guy is doing, do the same damn thing, & get back to watching YouTube and knock back a cold one.

Now let's translate the behavioral observations above into the online world.

What if instead of having to do all the hard work online by myself, i could just see what my friends (or famous celebrities) are doing?  What if i could just use my social network & related information services to help me DISCOVER what other people have already bought?  Then i could just forget about all that research, and cut to the chase.  Imagine if the dominant way to make money on the web changed from using search engines to monetize future intent, and instead transitioned to using news feeds and social networks to monetize discovery & distribution of past transactional behavior? 

hmmm...  that might create a whole new way for someone to make a Mint out of social networks.

[cue Pink Floyd's "Money" & cash register sounds... then fade to black]

Saturday, July 05, 2008

Facebook's Yishan Wong to Kottke, TechCrunch, et al: "You Wouldn't know a Walled Garden if it bit you in your F8."

Yishanmy former PayPal colleague Yishan Wong, now an ass-kicking, name-taking engineer at Facebook, lays the "Walled Garden" rebuttal smackdown on Kottke, Arrington, et al.   you go, Yishan... you just go.

look for more news on the Facebook front coming in a few weeks at the 2008 Facebook F8 conference in SF on July 23rd (register before July 7 to save some bucks).  rumor has it Dave Morin will be debuting Facebook Friend (oops) Connect at the event.  no word on whether Mr. Morin will be ripping any big air on stage, but we know he has the cojones if needed.

F8i'd also bet even money F8 will featured the long-awaited debut of Facebook Payments, whereby Facebook will finally begin addressing the monetization issue that has been dogging them for the past half-year. (btw, interesting listserve here apparently run by Jared Morgenstern... hi Jared ;)

happy 4th of July to everyone, and enjoy the long weekend... second half of 2008 begins Monday. gonna be a very interesting summer, i think.

update #1: Doh! guess Yishan's post is only visible to his facebook friends... okay, so maybe semi-permeable garden, perhaps.  for the record, Yishan notes in the comments this is likely a bug, not intentional.  might want to fix that.

update #2: so Kottke obviously came across this [now a bit ironic] post, and noted that it's also not viewable.  to which, i was going to write a 'yeah, guess it seems a little silly' comment... except that Kottke's blog doesn't appear to accept comments (or am i missing something?) except on this property where nobody ever comments. tho his TOU seems to suggest he did previously, and earlier posts do have comments... if i'm clueless, maybe someone who knows the story there can fill me in.  still, i wonder if people who live in semi-permeable blogs should throw stones at invisible smackdowns.

update #2b: thanks to Jon Bell who informed me that occasionally Kottke's posts are comment-enabled... but not that one.

update #3: no question, mr. kottke has a pretty damn huge audience.  getting one of my larger traffic days ever from his off-day link to my piddly-ass little piece of shit i call a blog.  holy crap.

Friday, June 20, 2008

"Liquid Conversations" @ Supernova: Rise of the Comment Mashup DJ Artist & The Share Pimp

Our recent Liquid Conversations panel at Supernova covered some interesting territory about how blog posts & particularly comments are becoming more distributed, shared semi-privately among friends & followers.

in particular, i think there's a really interesting conversation (heh) that's becoming more important around the role of what i call the Comment DJ Mashup Artist, or the Share Pimp -- that is, not the person who creates original content, but rather the person who promotes / shares / pimps it out to other audiences, whether that be via Digg, Delicious, Reddit, Mixx, Facebook News Feed, FriendFeed, Flickr, YouTube, Twitter, SlideShare, embeds (see below), etc etc. 

i think this is a really important function, one that you often see performed by someone like a Robert Scoble or a top Digger (or occasionally yours truly).  we may not be original, but we amplify signal like nobody's business.  this particular audience is one that website owners & content creators should be paying more attention to... they may even be more important than the person who creates.

here is the TechCrunch writeup & another by Elliott NG / CNreviews:

and here's a followup video interview Nick Douglas did with me after the panel:

Link: sevenload.com

a few other photos:

Liquid1

Bret Taylor (FriendFeed) and Dave Sifry (Offbeat Guides, ex-Technorati)
(CC) Elliott Ng, UpTake Travel Search

Liquid2

Loic Le Meur (Seesmic), Dave McClure (500 Hats)
(CC) Elliott Ng, UpTake Travel Search.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Viral Marketing & Advertising Strategies for Social Networks (Kevin Barenblat, Context)

Kevin Barenblat, Context OptionalI invited Kevin Barenblat from Context Optional to lead a workshop on viral marketing & advertising strategies for social networks at Graphing Social Patterns East, and boy did he ever deliver.

Here is his presentation, one of the best i've ever seen on this topic:

thanks Kevin!

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Graphing Social Patterns panel on News Feeds: I Can Haz Privacy?


The GSP Feed Panel
Originally uploaded by duncandavidson

Chris Messina & David Recordon share a moment on privacy, at the Graphing Social Patterns East panel on The NEED for FEEDs, along with Dave Morin (Facebook), Adam Nash (LinkedIn), and Kevin Chou (Watercooler).

this panel was WAAAYY out of control, but lots of fun ;)

Graphing Social Patterns East: Day 1 Video Bumpers

Several folks attending the Graphing Social Patterns East 2008 conference asked if we could post links to the video bumpers between speaker / session changes... here is the list of links from Day 1:

among others, this one in particular was a lot of fun & relevant to the topic :)

Monday, June 09, 2008

RockYou Raises $35M from Doll Capital

LancejiaCongrats to Lance, Jia, & the RockYou team on raising a $35M Series C round from DCM (formerly Doll Capital).

Don't spend it all in one place guys... unless of course, that place is the next Graphing Social Patterns conference... cough, cough ;)

Ro Choy from RockYou will be speaking at GSP East this week in DC.

Friday, June 06, 2008

Google Frienemy Connect (Not)

"just to be clear, we really want to provide this feature, but a company who shall remain nameless is preventing us from delivering its juicy goodness to you, our customer..."

with Friendly Connects like these, who needs Frienemies?

Monday, June 02, 2008

AppNite Geek Discount for Graphing Social Patterns East (DC, 6/9-11)

Gspeast125x125 Graphing Social Patterns East is almost upon us -- my conference on social networks & platforms is just one week away, beginning Mon June 9th thru Wed June 11th in Washington DC.

GSP East will feature keynote presentations from Facebook, MySpace, Google, & LinkedIn, along with over 75 other speakers from top social networking marketers, developers, & platforms.  The full conference schedule is here.

Several starving developers have asked me if we could make a few discounted passes available, so for those of you geeks on a budget here are two last-minute options to save some cash:

For additional conference updates, join the following groups:

also, here are some of the slide presentations & videos from our previous Graphing Social Patterns West conference in San Diego this past March:

Chris Messina, Citizen Agency / The DiSo Project

Charlene Li, Forrester Research / Groundswell

look forward to seeing you folks next week in DC!

Friday, May 23, 2008

Chris Messina is Making Things Better.

Bus_128Chris "Factory Joe" Messina lays it down in a recent post called "The Battle for the Future of the Social Web".

While i don't always agree with Chris, his perspectives are always insightful.  In regard to the recent Facebook Connect vs. Google Friend Connect
wars, i appreciate his recognition that *both* companies (not just one) are self-interested, even if they posture otherwise. 

[and note, i'm not saying either is Good or Evil... simply that they choose to create user benefit for their own purposes, not for some misplaced sense of altruism or a new network effect about "goodness"].

Regardless he is correct there's a war going on.  It caught everyone's attention last week, and it's not likely to die down anytime soon. 

Personally i tend to opt for market competition over standards as the optimal way to improve our lives -- technical or otherwise, but i respect that Chris & others like Chris Saad put their money time where their mouths are on stuff like the DiSo Project & Data Portability.

In any case, i suggest you give Chris's post a good read... he's smart, and it's excellent.

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