Brand Republic
 
Edition:
UK |
Asia
 
Digital jobs

Jobs

 

Directory

 

Facebook Fatigue  

Comments:3   Add your comment

Recent research from the Future Foundation, presented at the Women & Technology seminar shows that whilst the frequency of Internet usage of men and women is similar, women & men use the internet for different things in different ways. For example, women are more likely to have uploaded photos, videos or music to a web-site. Women are more likely to have created a personal blog. Women are more likely to have created and updated a personal profile on a social networking site.

According to the Future Foundation, women use a social networking site on average 3 times a week (compared to 3.2 times amongst their male counterpart). Whereas men are more likely to consider “making my opinion heard”, “sharing views” and “displaying personal creativity” key reasons for social networking, women are more likely to use the sites to form communities and listen to the views of other women. My own experience of Facebook echoes this. At first, I loved it. I discovered that I could get in touch with people that I had lost contact with. I enjoyed adding them to my growing friend list (which made me feel popular) and discover what they were up to. For a while I updated my profile religiously and I imagined that my contacts would be curious about what I was up to.

However, as my friend-list grows I found myself overwhelmed by updates from my modest list of friends. I began to realise that there is a very good reason I do not keep in regular contact with the extended cloud of contacts with whom facebook shares my updates. The truth is that I'm not that all that curious about their lives and nor are they with mine otherwise we would have never have lost contact in the first place. Most of the 'status updates' consist of mundane activities of people I barely know any more. Consequently the more friends I add, the less valuable Facebook becomes. 

Cory Doctrow was one of the first to debate the diminishing value of social networking: The more people get involved in a social network, the more users are likely to encounter people they'd rather avoid. And whilst it may be socially awkward to refuse to add someone to your friends list, deleting them from your friend-list is practically a declaration of war. The problem seems to be that Facebook treats a mundane update like 'watching TV' with the same degree of importance as 'Getting married'. Likewise it cannot distinguish between my closest friends and people I've not seen since I was a child but thought it would be fun to add to Facebook.

My own usage of Facebook has declined rapidly after an initial bubble of enthusiasm. I no longer feel a desire to monitor my friends' updates. The barrage of mostly meaningless email solicitations from 3rd party plug-ins. In Cory's words, the social network has transformed into something which has "the social graces of a nose-picking, hyperactive six-year-old, standing at the threshold of your attention and chanting, "I know something, I know something, I know something, won't tell you what it is!" Obviously the social networks need to find a balance between 3rd party added-value and the proliferating nuisance from third-party extensions. That should be easy enough and a good start, but there is a much bigger problem to solve: In order to make the networks more appealing to women, companies and brands need to find a way to stay relevant post that initial bubble. I'd like to see a social network which can recognize that not all friends are created equal.

Comments

August 22, 2008 9:41 AM
 

know what you mean. I stopped using facebook last year. it's the last website i check now and only when i've exhausted all the others i regularly check whether it's my personal email or news and entertainment sites

 
 
August 22, 2008 10:34 AM
 

I totally agree. Facebook is still mostly a popularity contest/mall arcade and most users run riot like kids in a candy store adding apps and friends willy-nilly. Of course, there are ways and means to manage these issues e.g. setting your privacy settings to a level that prevents you from being contacted by the 3rd-party barkers. I've reset all my privacy settings and have managed to avoid any of the awkward situations Doctrow mentioned. And for important information from friends, my filters are on so I can trap that info or block the unncecessary stuff. The trick is to be selective about how and where you interact with the site and others. And once those choices are made, the site becomes useful again. That said I still use it only to keep in touch with my friends overseas.

 
 
August 31, 2008 9:59 PM
 

You raise an interesting point.  How easy is it to set all your filters?  And many users actually know you can do it?  And how many that know actually bother?  Would you use it if it wasn't for your overseas friends?

 
To comment on this post you have to be logged in

About this blog

Lady Geek

Lady Geek is about women and technology and explores the failings of many tech and gaming brands to connect to women.
 

About the author

Belinda Parmar

Blogging for:

Lady Geek

Member since: 17 Aug 2008

Last login: 18 Nov 2009

Total Posts: 54

 
 
 
 

Tags

 

Syndication