Posts Tagged ‘college’

The Search for the Next Facebook

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Much has been made in recent weeks regarding Facebook’s entry into the geo-location game, the heavyweight in the field entering a ring presently dominated by agile, well-supported upstarts like Foursquare and Gowalla.  Social media pundits and aficionados are asking aloud, “Does the mere release of the Places platform signal the end of geo-competition yet in its infancy?”  Early returns seem to indicate otherwise, as Foursquare, in particular, has reached significant milestones in the wake of the Facebook’s highly anticipated announcement.  But are they safe?  Is anyone truly safe in this arena?  Observers need only glance askew, where once mighty MySpace sits alone, relegated to the sidelines and reduced to cloning parts of the competitors they once viewed as annoying wannabes, to wonder for themselves:  Who or what could end Facebook’s reign as undisputed king of the social media mountain?

Bubbling beneath the surface, in various forms and degrees of release-readiness, lie a number of developing social networks who’ve set their aim squarely on the 900-pound gorilla in the room.  From one perspective or another, they believe they have a different approach, an innovative solution to issues or concepts that Facebook either lacks or has consciously chosen to ignore.  Do these teams of savvy coders and well-backed entrepreneurs have what it takes to even make a dent in a Facebook population that would rank among the world’s largest were it a sovereign nation?  Will audiences respond in such a way that an anti-Facebook movement develops, leading to a mass migration ala MySpace circa 2007?  These four startups certainly believe that they can.

Considering the inherent mission of a would-be Facebook killer, Diaspora has a particularly apt name.  Whether you consider that they intend to use an open-source distribution model or that their ultimate success lies in the dispersionDiaspora logoof the Facebook population in favor of their solution, these four NYU students have never lacked for ambition. Galvanized by the Facebook privacy debacle earlier this year, the team behind Diaspora set out to create a “personal web service that will put individuals in control of their data”.  They gave themselves less than 40 days to raise the $10,000 necessary for the four of them to live on while they dedicated themselves and their summer to the project.  Apparently, a chord was struck, as they raised ten times that amount in the allotted time.  Somewhat curiously, even Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg was among the contributors.  Recently, it was announced that the code would be revealed to other programmers on September 15th, with a “consumer facing alpha” expected in October.

While the Diaspora team may boast the most romantic origin story, they’re certainly not the only players in the game.Scoop Google head Eric Schmidt’s personal VC firm has invested in a group called Trumpet Technologies, who, in addition to specializing in “mobile local search”, have charged two college students with designing a network they’re calling “Scoop”. While Diaspora seems to be all about privacy and control, Scoop aims to be the go-to source for the “wheres” and “hows”, providing up-to-the-minute info for the hyper-social set, hoping to find a niche as a service primarily accessed via mobile app on increasingly prevalent smartphones.  They’re also taking a page from the Facebook playbook, reaching into the social giant’s past as an exclusively college-based enterprise.  This sentiment becomes a recurring theme.

Farther along in the development cycle is Collegiate Nation, currently accepting signups to its launched beta.  Born out of a mother’s outrage at her university-aged sons’ unwitting offerings of the private information that has fueled Facebook’s skyrocketing valuation, Collegiate Nation isn’t designed as a Facebook alternative, but as a staunch anti-Facebook community. It is college-only, as the name vaguely suggests, like many nascent networks who see opportunity in the fertile environment that served as their target’s incubator.  While free during this phase of the launch, it plans to charge a nominal subscription as not to be beholden to ad networks.  And privacy is paramount.  The sign-up form even includes the caveat that non-students who have .edu addresses are committing fraud if they sign up for the service.  If only they were as concerned with the appearance as they are about the sanctity of their network.  Time will tell if traditionally poor college students will pay a premium for a site that looks anything but.

College Only

from the College Only media kit

The final entry in our survey takes a much more… suggestive… approach to the university-only, “walled garden” approach.  College Only, with beta launches at seven schools in time for this fall semester, is the culmination of one NY entrepreneur’s serial attempts to recreate social media phenomena with a student focus.  Combine the features of GoodCrush, a collegiate-oriented Match.com, and RandomDorm, a student-only Chatroulette, with a little Facebook circa 2005 and you have the gist of CollegeOnly.  A quick perusal of the media kit reveals that this is as far from a concerned mother’s creation as possible, calling itself the place where “student bodies connect”.  With the opportunity to post anonymously, as well as the promise of only light moderation, CollegeOnly may find its audience, but it may also find itself with the same privacy issues that once plagued Facebook, campus-exclusive or not.

While similar in goal if not execution, none of these would-be Facebook killers solves the perceived problem in the same manner.  And while that’s a good thing for surveys such as this, the ultimate question of which approach most closely reflects the desires of the marketplace, especially a fickle one like the 18-24 set, will play out over the next few years.  In terms of scope (and no longer being an undergrad), I’ll be keeping my eye on Diaspora.   Just remember, MySpace was once the king of the social media jungle and while it lacked Facebook’s vision (or luck), it never made the type of mistakes that Facebook has over the past year or so.  You have to believe an empire of a half billion users can fall.
The question is:  Do any of these new networks have what it takes to be the next Facebook?

As always, I welcome your thoughts and comments, leave them below or email me @ Thomas AT FeedbackAgency DOT com.

- Thomas (@thomasmcdonald)

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Anna and Heather’s Social Media Picks of the Week – Higher Education Edition (05/14/10)

Friday, May 14th, 2010



Pick up any college brochure or catalog; delete the brand names and the map … can you tell which college this is?

Seth Godin, author, blogger and CEO of Squido.com, recently blogged about the “Coming Meltdown in Higher Education” (as Seen by a Marketer).”  Some of his insights certainly provide food for thought:

  • Most undergraduate college and university programs are organized to give an average education to average students
  • Accreditation isn’t the solution, it’s the problem.
  • One reason to go to college was to get access.  Today, that access is worth a lot less.

His article has sparked lively conversation online and with those on both sides of the fence. The conversation has been, at the very least, interesting and entertaining to read.

Dubbed the “most comprehensive university social marketing campaign seen to date” – OSU’s “Power of Orange” campaign

OSU built a strategic social media presence on Facebook, YouTube, Flickr, LinkedIn and multiple Twitter accounts. What’s “Powered By Orange?” Here’s the answer from the PBO website:

“It’s you – the network of alumni, students, faculty, staff, friends and fans connected to Oregon State University. It’s the positive impact you make every day in Portland and beyond – on the economy, the environment and the community. Use this Web site to tell your story and connect with the other practical idealists who are Powered by Orange.”

Since the campaign’s launch, enrollments have soared, first-time donations by alumni are up and visits to the OSU website have grown exponentially. Luanne Lawrence, OSU’s vice president of university advancement said that they are letting social media drive their decision making,

“We stripped our budget and rebuilt it. It was the hardest thing we had to do. Fifteen to twenty-five year-olds are rebuilding every aspect of the industry, and I’m listening to them.”

Watching the Web Watch the UVa Murder Case

In a time of tragedy and a lot of questions left unanswered regarding the death of UVa’s women’s lacrosse player, Yeardley Love, social media seems to have found a way to respond with patience and maturity. The sports blog, Deadspin, known at one time for its vindictive and unprofessional posts, proved a firm and respectful grasp of the situation by shutting off comments on the UVa story when they veered towards bad taste.

Editor, A.J. Daulerio said, “It was more a message to think a little bit more next time around.”

There also wasn’t a single negative comment to be found when a Facebook page was set up in Yeardley’s memory. Instead, there has been an outpouring of compassion towards Love.  The number of likes on the Facebook page jumped from 4000 to 13,000 within 14 hours … and two weeks later, there are over 66,000 likes.

Social media addiction: Worse than you think

One student blogged the following: I started to feel isolated and lonely…By 2:00 pm I began to feel the urgent need to check my email, and even thought of a million ideas of why I had to. I felt like a person on a deserted island…. I noticed physically, that I began to fidget, as if I was addicted to my iPod and other media devices, and maybe I am.

Two hundred University of Maryland students agreed to live 24 hours without any social media – no cell phone, iPods, or computers. The results of this study actually found that students suffered from the same physical and emotional withdrawal symptoms as alcohol and drug addicts when they went without social media and their cell phones for 24 hours.


Self proclaimed middle-aged, balding college President learns valuable social media lessons

President Brian Rosenberg of Macalester College has never blogged, tweeted, and he’s not on Facebook. However, as he stated, he learned first-hand how new forms of social media “have more potential to connect audiences across both generational and geographic boundaries than do virtually all previous forms of communication.”

After a seemingly innocent, self-parodying video on YouTube, “President’s Day at Macalester College” initially designed to engage alumni reached over 40,000 viewers on YouTube and annual fund donations spiked, the self non-technology savvy college president has had a change of heart:

“I have begun to learn about the nature and power of the social media that are reshaping the way we communicate with one another and should be reshaping the way organizations of all kinds communicate.” – President Rosenberg

-Heather (@HMillar13) and Anna (@alucas9)

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