IGNORE THE MEDIA REPORTS, FACEBOOK IS GROWING
April 1st, 2008 by Michael Cooper 
Last night we attended a highly informative presentation by Blake Chandlee, commercial director of Facebook hosted by TBWA\Manchester. The presentation to prospective clients, media and account handlers gave an insight into the company that can only be described as a social media success story.
He addressed some interesting issues including recent media claims that ‘Facebook fatigue’ has kicked in and active user numbers are dwindling. Blake claims quite the opposite citing the rise in users following the recent launch of the social utility across other European countries. He explained the ambitious system of translating the huge network into different languages with the support of the community through the ‘Translation’ application. What astonished me more than anything was the speed with which the translations took place within the community- just 8 hours for one of the languages!
He covered numerous topics including polls (”Don’t ever pay for one”), Beacon (”Didn’t go down well”), Apps (”Some work but a lot fail”), taking on HSBC and even Mark Zuckerberg (”He looks about 12!”). The most interesting aspect was Facebook’s perception of itself as an altruistic company, seeing themselves as a social utility rather than a network - a tool to connect people and extend relationships rather than a social space. There’s conversation at the moment about the sharing of information and applications across multiple user spaces as encouraged by Google Open Social. Blake explained that Facebook is excited about this development and has no goal to keep users locked into using the site.
All this relates to the user experience. Something that Facebook are trying to make as enjoyable as possible. In relation to marketing, this means you’re likely to see the flashy side bar ads disappear in the near future and clients investing more in social advertising. Currently appearing in the newsfeed section of the site, these are likely to develop although Blake did note that personal information would always be kept secure and never given out to third party advertisers despite the adverts becoming more personalised.
As for the continual barrage of app spam we receive every day from so-called friends? Well Facebook has banned ‘force invites’ in apps - something I wasn’t aware but probably only because it was publicised to the developer community. As Blake commented, if an app is forcing you to invite friends, just report them and they’ll be kicked out.
He did also comment afterwards that their business plan is constantly changing so who knows what we can really expect from Facebook in the future? Only Mark Zuckerberg really knows and so let’s hope he really is one of those rare individuals who “think different“.
Tags: Applications, apps, beacon, blake chandlee, Facebook, google, HSBC, manchester, mark zuckerberg, open social, polls, Social Media, social utility, tbwa, translation




April 1st, 2008 at 6:01 pm
I just stopped by your blog and thought I would say hello. I like your site design. Looking forward to reading more down the road.
Robert Michel
April 1st, 2008 at 6:09 pm
Hi Robert. Thanks for your feedback. Hope you’ll stop back again soon.
April 2nd, 2008 at 9:43 am
I’ll believe that Facebook are going to “open up” the service when I see it. With the addition of facebook ads recently its become clear they are looking to turn a tidy profit and releasing that control will be a severe detriment to that.
Another interesting side note I’m getting from people who have trialled Facebook banner ads is that they convert to sales horribly and that they don’t feel that people on Facebook are in “buying mode” - this is likely the motivation of looking for different advertising types - got to keep the ad buyers happy!
Anthony
April 10th, 2008 at 9:43 pm
I’m honoured to think that Blake Chandlee mentioned our successful protest against HSBC, but I do think he might be slightly misleading us on this. The fact is that in the UK Facebook does seem to have reached a peak. From my experience people are logging on less, doing less when they do log on and are generally a little bit sick of Facebook. The Facebook team are trying to divert attention from this by pointing to new growth, yes it is true that older people are joining now and yes it is great that it is spreading overseas but the fact still remains that Facebook is suffering a backlash amongst its core demographic, university students and recent graduates. Don’t get me wrong, I love Facebook, it works wonders for campaigning and was key to forcing HSBC to respect the promises they’d made to thousands of students. The real challenge for Facebook is, can they learn from their previous mistakes and not trip themselves up with privacy concerns in the new countries that are just discovering Facebook?
Johnny
July 2nd, 2008 at 7:22 am
Hey nice blog people. Yep, this recent report in Techcrunch backs the ‘Fb ain’t dead yet’ story having now overtaken MySpace in terms of visitors:
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/06/12/facebook-no-longer-the-second-largest-social-network/
Ade x