Tagged: Richard Stacy

Arianna, Sedat and me

Next week I am in Istanbul talking at the Digital Age conference alongside Arianna Huffington and Turkish digital guru Sedat Kapanoglu.  So no real pressure then.  This post is actually just an excuse to publish the propmotional poster that shows me alongside two such elevated personages.

Facebook f8 changes: making it easier to do the wrong thing

Facebook has recently unveiled a whole host of changes. Essentialy these appear to be about moving beyond the ‘like’ and giving brands more sophisticated ways to integrate themselves into users’ ‘stories’.   At one level these changes may well be successful but at another, they may simply be a means of encourging brands to do the wrong thing more effectively.

I must confess I wrote-off Facebook as a significant tool for marketers a long time ago, largely because I couldn’t see how the obsession with collecting ‘likes’ and recreating your website in Facebook was actually going to create anything of sustainable value.  Instead I have been advising organisations to focus on the discussion capabilities of Facebook – using it as just one community where you can encourage, usually very small numbers of people, to talk in more detail about aspects of your brand if they want to.  I.e. creating a Facebook embassy which is there to service the needs of people who, for whatever reason, want to use Facebook as the environment to ask you questions.

However, I have recently ‘re-engaged’ with Facebook – not professionally, but personally.  I first signed-up to Facebook in the early days, and all the people I was ‘friends’ with were not actually friends, but the social media geek squad.  My real friends were not on it.  Because a blog and Twitter were much better tools for professional use I largely ignored Facebook, simply dropping my WordPress feed into it.  Now however, many of my real friends are on Facebook, so recently I have purged my friends list of all my professional contacts and started to link-up with proper friends again (although for some reason, while I have got Robert Scoble off my friends list, I can’t get his content out of my news feed.  Why is this, is it testament to the awesome invasive power of Scobleness?)

And now I am starting to use Facebook as it is meant to be used, I realise I have absolutely no desire to use it to ‘engage’ in any way whatsoever with anyone, or anything, other than my friends.  I don’t want to have my Facebook space cluttered up or intefered with by brands.  I suspect I am not alone.

Yesterday also received a lengthy update email from Diaspora.  Here is a clip from it.  Diaspora* will never sell your social life to advertisers, and you won’t have to conform to someone’s arbitrary rules or look over your shoulder before you speak.  And because your information is yours, not ours, you’ll have the ultimate power — the ability to move your profile and all your social data from one pod to another, without sacrificing your connection to the social web. Over time, this will bring an end to the indifferent, self-serving behavior that people can’t stand[3] from the walled gardens that dominate social networking today. When you can vote with your feet for the environment where you feel safest, the big guys will have to shape up, or risk losing you.

Now Diaspora is a long way from challenging Facebook – but it is swimming with tide of social media, because it is grounded in achieving the necessary social permission to operate.  As distinct from Facebook, whose need to justify an excessive valuation now means it is chasing the commercial permission to operate.

Stop wasting money on social media (and social media agencies)

As an advocate of social media, I am becoming increasingly frustrated at the amount of money and effort that is now being wasted on it.  There are so many car crashes occurring as organisations drive recklessly and desperately into this space (I have been called to the scene of a few) that I have been prompted to try and define what is happening and why – with a view to help minimise the damage.  In doing this I have drawn from my own experience and observations, but also an analysis of the services offered (and case studies) of a number of the UK’s ‘leading’ social media agencies.

My conclusion is that there are three basic stages to successful adoption of social media and only one of these involves wasting money.  Unfortunately this is the phase most organisations are in at the moment. Continue reading

Google+ – a solution in search of a problem

First I must say that I am desperate to like Google+.  I really want it to succeed because I like Google. I find many of their products fantastically useful (gmail, maps, Android, calendar, docs.) I also trust Google (within the limits imposed by the fact that it is a listed corporation).  I also believe that the world of the social media citizen is desperate for a breakthrough tool that can start to impose some order on the management of your social media world – and Google seems to be the company best placed to do this.

And – the good news is I do like Google+.  In the same way that Apple have worked out how to do ‘beautiful straight from the box’ for devices, Google have created something which has that same appeal in terms of a platform (something that will probably only get better as they iron out the wrinkles).  Google+ has that sort of playability that makes you want to use it.

But here is where the doubts start to creep in.  You want to use it, but to do what exactly?  Continue reading

Google versus Facebook: a battle for social consent

The recent launch of Google + has prompted much commentary on the battle between Google and Facebook and the need for Google to establish a foothold in the social space where people, rather than algorithms, do the work.   Google + has still not gone on general release, but the consensus seems to be that it is a good product which stands a better chance of success that Buzz or Wave – Google’s previous ‘Big Social Thingies’.  The smart money is saying that it might not kill Facebook, but it could kill Twitter.  Ultimately though, it doesn’t matter what the digerati think, a social tool only becomes relevant when it secures mass adoption, or, as Clay Shirky has put it – tools only become socialy interesting when they become technically boring.

All this speculation his has prompted me to think again about the whole Google versus Facebook battle and conclude that we are missing a trick here.  This isn’t simply that the business model for both companies is based on the assumption that both are forms of media and thus advertising platforms, when in reality Facebook in particular is more akin to an infrastructure (as previously blogged here and here in relation to LinkedIn).  It extends to the fact that society as whole has not developed a form of social consensus around the business models of Facebook and Google (et al).  Basically Google and Facebook have not yet acquired a social licence to operate and, potentially, may not be able to secure such a licence.

This may sound a pretty abstract concern and I can bet  considerations of social consensus have not worried the awfully clever chaps at Goldman Sachs when they have been devising their models for valuing Facebook.  But I think they should be worried about it, and this is why.

There is a form of social consensus that has developed around the business model of the traditional media.  This is based around the recognition that being a conventional media business involves a lot of cost – not just in making the content, but because distributing the content is expensive.  This high cost of distribution is what actually creates the high cost of producing the content – it has to be high quality / mass interest in order to make it worthwhile putting into expensive distribution channels.  Therefore if we want to receive the content the mass media produces, we have to give something in return – we either pay for it, or we allow our consumption of it to be interrupted by advertising.  This basic social contract is hardwired into our understanding and behaviour.  Even if individual citizens don’t connect all the dots, society as a whole has worked this one out and thus this business model has gained social consent.  It is a balanced relationship – what we give is reflected in what we get: advertising revenues or subscriptions cover the production and distribution costs – with a modest margin on top which represents the media’s profits.

How much money is enough?  Why Craig Newmark is smarter than Sir Martin Sorrell

A few years back, when Craigslist was eating up the classified advertising lunch of regional newspapers in the US, Craigslist and founder Craig Newmark drew the ire of the likes of Sir Martin Sorrell, boss of WPP, the world’s largest advertising and media network.   He accused Craigslist of destroying value, in the sense that here was a market that was worth billions and Craigslist was taking it apart and not replacing it with a model that yielded similar billions.  For a chap like Martin Sorrell this just seems inconceivable – why waste an opportunity to make billions for yourself.  Craig Newmark himself was often asked why he wasn’t making more money from his idea.  His response to this was incredibly revealing in more ways than one.  He simply said “I don’t need that much money”.  Now while Craig, unassuming chap that he is, may have meant that he, personally, didn’t need or want  billions of dollars; his reply actually reveals a much more profound truth.  Craiglist, quite literally, didn’t need that much money.  It replaced something that cost a great deal of money to organise (regional newspapers and classified advertising) with something that largely organised itself, requiring only some software, some rules of participation and some server space.

The rules of basic economics dictate that in a functioning market economy, in the medium to long-term you cannot make super-profits. A couple of hundred years ago David Ricardo proved why this is the case, based on the theory that marginal revenues can never significantly exceed marginal costs.  If you apply Ricardo’s theory to Craigslist, Craig may have been able to charge millions for his service initially, but because the costs of being Craigslist and entering this market are so minimal, it was always going to be easy for a competitor to set up an offering at a lower price and relatively soon the market will stabilise at a point where the price of using the service (value opportunity) sits pretty close to cost of providing the service.  And because the cost is minimal the value opportunity will also be minimal.   Craig Newmark was not destroying value, he was actually liberating capital to be employed more efficiently elsewhere.  Mr Sorrell, arch defender of capitalism and the free markets that he is, really should have known that Craigslist is capitalism and free markets in action, even if Craig himself eschews the behaviours of a traditional capitalist.

Why is this relevant to social consent, Facebook and Google? Neither of these organisations are making super-profits.  Google is certainly making healthy profits almost all of which comes from advertising around its core search product.  Facebook had estimated revenues in 2010 of $2 billion and while we don’t know how this translated into profits this figure seems very low when compared to a valuation of $41 billion.  Well, as with Craig Newmark you have to ask the question “how much money do you they really need” – what does it actually cost to deliver Google or Facebook.  And the reason this question is important is because it is this – the true marginal cost – that will ultimately determine what it is that people will be prepared to give them in return. Of course we think that we don’t give Google or Facebook anything, because they don’t charge us to use their services.  However, in reality we do give them something.  We give them information about ourselves.  This is where the problem starts, because we are only just beginning to understand the implications of giving away vast amounts of personalised information, not just through our usage of Google and Facebook but actually via our participation in the social digital space.  It is not just a question of the commercial value of this information it is also a question of understanding a whole host of implications – both positive and negative – that stem from giving away this data.  In all probability no-one, not even Google or Facebook, really has a thorough grasp on the implications of a world where so much personalised data in being generated and has the potential to be used either by themselves, sold to, or otherwise obtained, by interested parties.  One thing is for certain, the individual users of Google and Facebook have no idea about the consequences of giving away so much knowledge about their lives.

Understand the true cost of Google and Facebook

If you want to start to get a handle on exactly what these implications are, a very good place to start is Eli Pariser’s book The Filter Bubble.  The Bubble in question is a unique to each one of us, individually crafted via our actions and choices as tracked via our digital activity.  This bubble not only controls what information comes in to us, it also reflects an image of us to the outside world – albeit an image that has huge potential for distortion, manipulation or mis-use.  Pariser does a very good job of highlighting the dangers of creating highly personalised worlds,  showing how this can isolate us from the experiences and serendipitous encounters that are necessary both to develop a balanced world-view and also generate creativity and innovation.  He also touches on the dark side – the potential for personalised digital information to be used either in ways which are far removed from the intention or original usage when we decided to share this in the first place, or to create identities of ourselves which are either misleading or far more revealing than we would wish (or believe we have given consent for).   One example that caused me to thumb-mark a particular page was the fact that banks can, or are, using social data to determine creditworthiness.  And this is not just derived from data you may have shared about yourself, but data derived from your network of friends or contacts.   Thus, if you have friends who have not paid their bills, this will have a negative impact on your own credit score.  This one single fact should be enough to make anyone think twice about their participation in social networks.

The other, rather scary thought, is that there is no one single ‘digital file’ held on all of us.  Neither Facebook or Google can easily pull their own files on a particular user – largely because that file is so big and distributed.  Instead information is pulled out through windows shaped by the questions that are asked – you can isolate specific characteristics, but you can’t get the whole picture.  At the moment, in the case of Google and Facebook, these questions are framed by advertisers and the need to become more targeted in the selling of products and services.  Advertisers don’t really need to know the whole picture, they only need to know the bits of it relevant to what it is they are selling.

Where this becomes more worrying is in areas where it is in someone’s interest to make broader or more significant conclusions about an individual.  Take the example of a government intelligence agency.  All of us share a very great deal in common with your average terrorist or member of an organised crime syndicate.  We go to the same shops, buy similar clothes, eat the same food, listen to similar music etc.  In fact, the vast majority of what we do makes us look exactly the same.  It is of course, a very few but highly significant, differences that mark us apart.  The problem is that the instinct and abilities of most intelligence agencies are not to try to find evidence to disprove who is a terrorist or criminal – it is to look for similarities in patterns of behaviour and then search for more evidence to confirm these initial suspicions.  This means that it is theoretically possible for you or I to very easily end-up on a list of terrorist suspects, despite that fact that there may be huge amounts of available evidence to dissprove that conclusion, were anyone actually looking for it.  But because we don’t know we are on the list in the first place; neither we nor anyone else, really understands exactly what activities got us onto that list and no one is looking for the easily available evidence to get us off it – on the list we remain.  We, and to extent even our interrogators, are powerless because no-one really knows what ‘the internet’ thinks of us, we can only derive an imperfect picture of ourselves based on the question we ask it.

We give more than we receive: re-negotiating a social contract with social media

I could go much further into this whole issue – but the important conclusion from all of this is that the implications and value of what we are giving away is far greater than what we imagine it to be.  To take us back to the issue of social consent and the bargain we have struck when using ‘free’ social media services – we are giving away much more than we are receiving in return.  This fact is already implicit in the business models or valuations of both Facebook and Google.  In the instance of Facebook it is reflected in the fact that its valuation is many times greater than its current earnings would suggest.  In the instance of Google it is the fact that Google is probably making super-profits – but they are hidden.  Taken in isolation, its core search product is hugely profitable – but the organisation is using these profits to sustain investment in acquisitions and in developing range of ancillary products that are loss making, but which it believes are necessary to creating a sense of lock-in to the Google world, or which have the potential to generate more data and thus improve the proposition to advertisers.

The question therefore is what will happen as society as a whole develops a greater awareness of the value and implications of giving away information?  What will happen as we collectively comes to negotiate, or re-negotiate a social contact with social media?  What is unlikely to happen is that Google or Facebook will have to increase their offer.  People are not going to say that the best way to even up the relationship is for Facebook and Google to give us more.  Instead it is far more likely that people will start to demand that Google and Facebook take less – and how much less they have to take brings us back to Craig’s question and how much money Google and Facebook actually need in order to provide their services.

In Facebook’s case, the answer is probably “not a lot”.  What it took to create Facebook was a clever geek, a couple of good insights and some server space.  Outside of the actual costs of running the servers and developing the product – Facebook has added more cost, but this is related largely to the ability to generate revenue via advertising and these costs are essentially discretionary or are derived from the business model Facebook has decided to pursue, rather than the business model it has to pursue (albeit in reality the business model it has to pursue has now been set via the value it has placed on itself via the selling of shares in the business).  In essence, Facebook now needs to generate a lot of cash to fulfil its valuation expectations – but it doesn’t need a lot of cash to actually ‘be’ Facebook in the same way that Craigslist didn’t need a lot of cash to ‘be’ Craigslist.

In Google’s case the answer is more complicated.  Google is technologically a far more sophisticated set-up that Facebook.  Its core search algorithm and its associated technical processes have a great deal more intellectual property within them.  However, Google is not the only search engine, but it is the most popular search engine.   At one level you could point to the existence of several much less popular alternatives as evidence to demonstrate that in order to secure the profits Google makes from search, it is necessary to carry the costs of providing the rest of Google World thus creating the necessary lock-in or search loyalty.  It is difficult to make this call, and in many ways, the difficulty in getting a real handle on the business models of Google and Facebook stems from the absence of a real competitor.  Maybe it is not so much the absence of a competitor, but the absence of a genuine market within which the rules of competition have become established.  And implicit in the creation of a genuine market is the necessary element of social consent – or perhaps, in light of everything discussed thus far, informed social consent.

Taking less – why this may be the key to comparative advantage

Both Facebook and Google have grown up, and shaped their business models, in a digital world characterised by the absence of rules.  The social digital space in particular is new, it’s very different, and we are only starting to work out how to deal with it.  It is therefore quite likely that as we start to develop the necessary rules and as genuine markets start to emerge, this will be an environment that is increasingly hostile to the business models of the pioneers than opened up the space in the first place.  For example, as society starts to recognise the implications associated with giving away data, rather than demand more in return, it will instead demand far more restrictions around how personal data is used.  This may  manifest itself in demands for greater privacy or control from the likes of Google and Facebook – demands that these companies may not be able to satisfy and still continue to operate to their current business models.  But what is more likely to happen is that competitors will emerge – but these won’t be like Google or Facebook.  The main reason they won’t be like Google or Facebook is that they won’t have to generate the quantity of cash Google and Facebook need – either to sustain an artificial valuation or to preserve an enormous corporate empire, 90 per cent of which is loss making.  They will be able to approach consumers and say “we can do everything that Facebook does (because it is not difficult or expensive to do this) but what we don’t need to do is sell your data”.  And because of the emerging sensitivity about giving away data, this benefit will have a high perceived value.  In effect, these new players will be the ones that have the competitive advantage necessary to negotiate the necessary social licence to operate.

Predicting the demise of Google and Facebook may seem a little far-fetched, especially as they currently are the masters of the digital universe.  However, it is worth taking note of a couple of things.  First, in relation to this idea of social consent, we have recently seen some tumultuous events within the traditional media – the phone hacking scandal that has engulfed News Corporation.  Amongst other things this has caused News Corporation to close the News of the World, the UK’s largest circulation Sunday newspaper.  The reason it was forced to do this was due to the fact that the News of the World lost its social permission to operate.  It was also forced to abandon its bid to acquire all the shares in Sky TV – again not because it was forced to do so, but because it became clear that it failed to create the necessary social consent.

Second, we are starting to see the signs that the whole issue of usage of personal data is emerging out of the shadows.  Facebook has obviously had problems about privacy in the past – the introduction of Beacon being the best example of where it has already had its fingers burnt.  Google has escaped significant attention, probably because its products are less social and therefore seen as less intimate or revealing about the nature of their users.  However, take a look at this ‘viral’ presumably released by Microsoft – characterising the Gmail Man as the postman that reads all your mail and then tries to sell you products.  This is a clear indication that privacy has been identified as Google’s Achilles Heel and is an issue worthy of competitive exploitation.  We can expect more of this.

I might also suggest that Google has already been weakened by its desire to collect data in that, pre Google + it has not scored too many successes with its recent product launches.  My suspicion as to the reason for this is that its product development has not been sufficiently driven from a fundamental understanding about what ‘social media citizens’ really want, but more by Google’s desire for them to use certain types of products  – in large part products which will yield useful data.  A good example of this is the now largely forgotten Sidewiki.  As I identified at the time, the sting in the tail of this particular product was the fact that it required you give Google access to your browsing history.

Does this mean that Google and Facebook are wilfully manipulating us?

Probably not.  Google in particular has been very transparent about its ambitions to create a personalised web.  At worst you could accuse Google of a level of naivety in not fully understanding the social consequences of what they are doing.  This is not surprising since Google is at heart a technology company run by geeks – and geeks are notoriously bad at understanding social consequences.  Google also is popular and has a range of fantastic products.  It can therefore generate some comfort that it is ‘doing the right thing’.  Facebook is much less transparent, but there again it offers much less than Google and has much more it needs to gain – because it isn’t sitting on top of super-profitable search algorithm.  Facebook is also much easier to replace than Google and we are already starting to see Facebook alternatives that are explicitly making a play about data protection and privacy.   In both instances the driving commercial imperative is around capturing as much attention and usage as possible – thus making themselves harder to replace.  In essence it the Wild West 2.0 – staking out as much territory as possible before civilisation and its attendant wagon train of rules and regulations catches up.  This isn’t wrong or evil, it is just competition and capitalism.

Should we be worried?

We should probably be vigilant, rather than worried.  When revolutions happen, they tend to generate good stuff and bad stuff in equal measures.  The trick is to be alert so the bad stuff can be managed or controlled and the good stuff enhanced.  At the end of the day, it is going to come down to the construction of some new rules and regulations – either those that are legislated or which derive from social permission (as in fact most rules of society do – we don’t ‘not do stuff’ simply because it is illegal, unless you are a hedge fund manager).  We need to play a part in shaping those rules.

On the other hand, it is probably Facebook and Google which should be most worried.  The Wild West is not going to be wild much longer and they need to start developing a business model which is not simply based on squeezing-out the competition but is based on a world where people attach a much greater value to the data they decide to share.  And this doesn’t mean demanding more bang for their byte – it means either sharing less bytes or demanding much greater control over where those bytes end up.

LinkedIn CashedUp CrashReady

LinkedIn has ended its first day of trading as a public company with valuation of $8.9 billion.  This is 36 times its 2010 revenue.  That’s right – 36 times revenue.  As this Mashable piece points out this compares with Google at 5.5 times 2010 revenue and Demand Media at 4.4 times revenue.

What is the difference between LinkedIn and Demand Media? Well,  Demand Media has a business model: a business model that is currently working and which is rooted in the fundamentals of its business.  LinkedIn has none of these things.  Perhaps that fact that Demand Media has a functioning business model means that analysts have some form of reality upon which to base their assessments, whereas for LinkedIn all we  have is a model that appears to be a cocktail of one part fantasy and one part ignorance.

Whatever model the ever-so-clever money men are using, it will probably be one that basically regards LinkedIn as a form of content platform or media.  However, LinkedIn, Facebook et al are not forms of media, they are actually infrastructures – that is certainly is the way people use them.  I don’t know how you value LinkedIn as an infrastructure, especially when it is an infrastructure that didn’t really cost anything to build, where the idea behind it easily replicatable and the content within it essentially remains the property of its users.  That sounds to me like a max three or four times revenue multiple proposition.

At some point in it is going to dawn on Wall Street that these properties are largely disposable infrastructures that simply host content on behalf of users – basically branded data storage facilities with some service add-ons.  And then we will get the crash.

How do you regulate social media? Do you regulate social media?

Last week I had an interesting experience, presenting at a workshop on regulating digital media.  (My presentation is here, for those interested).

The folks attending were, in large part, those to whom Government (in its various iterations) has decided it falls to Do Something about the regulation of social media.  However the real problem they have, as I saw it, is that the current model of regulation just doesn’t work in social media.  This is because the current model relies on the fact that information is always married to an institutionalised means of distribution and this means of distribution is both the dominant partner in this relationship and can be regulated.  However, social media is all about the liberation of information from a particular means of distribution and therefore the means of distribution (the media) has ceased to be a gatekeeper through which we can control information.

Here is an example, drawn from some of the case studies discussed.  A nightclub in Belgium was running a party called French Kiss.  Continue reading

The future of advertising, media and Facebook (in Bulgaria)

A couple of weeks ago I was in Sofia, Bulgaria, to run a workshop and speak and the annual gathering of advertising and media folk, organised by the Bulgarian Assosication of Advertising Agencies.  I was doing this wearing my hat as a member of the faculty of the EACA School of Advertising and Communications.  Essentially I was there to explain, as politely as possible, that the business model of advertising is broken.  (Here is the presentation for those interested – it will make only vague sense since it is mostly just a collection of images Sofia 22 March 2011)

In the run-up to this I was also asked to answer some questions about the future of advertising, traditional media and Facebook for the online publication Human Capital.  Here are the answers – for those who speak Bulgarian, but I thought I would also publish them here in English, since it is relevant to advertising and media everywhere, not just in Bulgaria.

What are the major differences between traditional media and social media from advertisers’ perspective?

Continue reading

Why Facebook is abandoning individuals in favour of communities

Here is a bold claim.  In social media you can’t make money out of individuals, only communities.

Here’s why.  In the good old days, the way you made money out of media was by being a platform that allowed commercially sponsored messages to be placed in front of lots of individuals. For this to work well, the message had to be be very effective (which is why advertising creative directors made lots of money) and the media had to attract lots of individuals. The more individuals a platfrom could attract, the more money it could charge for its real estate.

This model doesn’t really work in social media, because, as we are slowly starting to realise, platforms such as Facebook are not really media platforms. Facebook can more easily be understood as a tool or an infrastructure. Despite what the film says, it is not a social network, it facilitates social networking. There may be huge numbers of people using the infrastructure – but you can’t reach ‘all of Facebook’ in the same way as you could reach ‘all the readers / viewers’. In reality, Facebook is an eco-system comprised of a vast number of tiny interactions bewteen very small groups of people. This creates a problem, because the commercial opportunity within these types of interaction is highly restricted. In the same way that no-one would want a commercial message inserted into a phone call, people don’t see a role for commercial intervention or interuption in the individual, small scale, relationships people have on Facebook.

This is a big problem for Facebook, because its current very high valuation is based, in large part, its status as a platfrom that can access millions of people. It has the millions of people, but it cannot provide the access in a way which makes commercial sense and complements the way in which people use the infrastructure. It can only sell itself as an advertising platform, but it is slowly realising that the value of an individual person within Facebook is an awful lot less than the value of an individual reader or viewer. Facebook is coming face-to-face with one of the fundamental rules of commercialising social media: in social media, you can’t make money out of individuals, only communities.

Essentially, there are very few chinks in the armour within individual interactions in social media that allow a credible intervention by an institution or commercial organisation. That is not to say that you should abandon the individual. Listening to individuals and their conversations, and responding where necessary is still a hugely valuable exercise. It is just that 99.99 per cent of all social media activity is un-receiptive to commercial intervention and thus it is just not scalable as a way of reaching lots of people.

However, this starts to change when you stop focusing on the individual and start to focus on the communities that individuals might form (focusing on behaviours, not on platforms or tools). Community is undoubtedly the ‘Next Big Thing’ in social media. The community is the new individual and the community probably represents the only sensible entry or engagement point for most institutions. In working out how to extract commercial value from community it is important to recognise one of the other fundamental rules – which is that individuals will be reluctant to allow themselves to be managed within communities controlled by institutions, rather they will prefer to form communities to manage their relationships with institutions. As people become more familiar with the tools of social media, they will work out how easy it is to create communities that help them ‘do stuff’.

Facebook understands this – which is why it has recently made changes to Facebook Groups and Facebook Pages which are designed to make it clear that Pages are where corporate organisations can have their Facebook outpost but that Groups are for individuals. Facebook is going flat out to encourage its users to aggregate themselves into small communities (Facebook Group functionality starts to de-grade once the Group exceeds 250 members), because it knows that its user base becomes commercially much more valuable as a large number of small communities than as an even larger number of individuals. The problem, of course, is that there are many other tools individuals can use to create communities – many of which are better than Facebook and thus Facebook is in a race a aginst time to try and establish the behaviour of community formation within Facebook in order to try and steal a march on the competition.

This is consistent with Clay Shirky’s assertion that revolutions don’t occur when societies adopt new tools, but when they adopt new behaviours. It is also consistent with Facebook’s objective of being the single tool you use to “do” all your social media, rather than being an application you can use to integrate tools produced by others.