Posts Tagged ‘like’

What Makes an Online Community Click?

Friday, January 14th, 2011

A couple years ago, I joined up with an online community that essentially dedicated its entire use of social media to humor writing. Mostly on Twitter, sure, but this group has creative endeavors outside the service – editors at legitimate news services, TV writers, cartoonists, ad copywriters, bloggers, authors. Most are in a creative career of some kind; others are simply cube warriors longing for an absurdist, 140-character escape.

This community has grown over the years, and what has come out of it are real-life friendships, serious relationships, business partnerships, and all the negative and positive things that develop from human interaction.

Yet every time I look at what has made this community grow and glue together (or tear apart in places, as any community will do) has been the concept of feedback, and I don’t use that term simply because that’s the name of this company. You can trace this mini society back to a site called Favrd. Now defunct, Favrd essentially turned Twitter’s “favorites” starring feature into a button that said “That’s funny.” If a tweet made you laugh, you starred it. Favrd collected these stars, then ranked the funniest tweets of the day onto a leaderboard (the site was eventually gamed by a few bad apples and taken down by the creator after all sorts of drama, but that’s a different story). But it was addicting: You wanted to know which jokes worked, which ones didn’t, and who liked it. And then you got to know the people who liked your jokes.

Point, please? A successful online community – one where people congeal together, interact, learn and share – must have such a “liking” feature, or some form of feedback that will keep people coming back again and again. It’s a concept that those of us in the public relations and mass communications industries should take to heart. In fact, you can probably track the beginnings of Facebook’s meteoric rise to 500 million to the February 2009 introduction of the “Like” feature. That was really the first time, aside from typing comments, that the site really allowed its users to give instantaneous feedback.

Of course, this concept of “liking” isn’t new, and it’s not found in the latest social media darlings. Stock traders give feedback and get their comments ranked on Nasdaq.com’s social networking service. Think feedback methods in fantasy football, online role-playing games, Digg, Reddit, or even simple message boards. Think about it: Feedback keeps people coming back to a website or mobile service again and again.

The key is creating a place where people can be effectively rewarded.

For an online community to work, and to keep people coming back to it, it must be able to offer feedback. All the successful websites today feed on the human psyche: The one thing anyone wants is to be accepted, to be loved, liked, hearted, starred, whatever term you choose. In a successful community, online or otherwise, this must be a constant.

-Jeff (@jephkelley)

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Anna’s Social Media Picks of the Week (06/18/10)

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Do you have time to search the web everyday to find the newest social media tools? If the answer is no, then you have come to the right place. I have searched the World Wide Web for social media information all week, and stumbled upon a few favorites along the way. Here are my picks of the week:

YouTube Video Editor:

You can now do quick editing to a video on YouTube. This week, YouTube announced a cloud based video editor that allows you to trim a video and replace background noise with music. To learn more about this feature, go here: http://bit.ly/dzsyZG

Like Even More on Facebook:

Ever like a comment someone posted on Facebook? As of this week, now you can now show it. Facebook is now allowing users to like comments on posts.  See an example below:

Twitter Places:

On Monday, Twitter launched a new feature called Twitter Places. Users can now tag tweets with existing Twitter Places, as well as add new Twitter Places on Twitter.com and Twitter mobile. Twitter places is also being integrated with Foursquare and Gowalla.

Record Breaking iPhone Pre-orders:

Apple took over 600,000 pre-orders for the new iPhones on the first day the gadget became available. This was a record number for Apple, 10 times higher than pre-orders for the iPhone 3GS last year.  The high demand for the new iPhone did cause some difficulties when it came to processing orders through U.S. carrier AT&T Inc.

FIFA Fever:

Have the FIFA Fever? If so, there are plenty of World Cup apps to ensure you keep up with the games wherever you are. Free blackberry apps include AP 2010 World Cup Coverage and Goal Mobile. Free iPhone apps include ESPN 2010 FIFA World Cup & Vuvuzela 2010. Android apps include World Droid Cup & World Cup 2010. There are also paid subscriptions such as Mobitv where you can watch games live. Twitter is also getting in on the action, with special hashtags, icons, & live Tweets for the World Cup. Go to twitter.com/worldcup for more details.

-Anna (@alucas9)

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Are you a Fan of “Like” on Facebook? Hope so.

Monday, April 19th, 2010

UPDATE:

Facebook has gone live with the changes:

FanBGone

Another interesting addition is the way they visually break out how many of your friends (assuming you’re logged in) “like” the Page as opposed to the complete total. For example, five of my friends like the band The Whigs:

Whigs

This is consistent with the way Facebook uses peer endorsement in advertising options, showing who else is attending, or “likes” an event or Page for an ad that is viewed.

UPDATE #2:

Looks like the new changes are turning on and off at random for some users as they roll them out. Expect them live for everyone shortly.

ORIGINAL POST:

Just for the record, it is NOT a big deal for the average person that Facebook will be shelving the term Fan as a signifier of a person’s relationship to a business, institution, product, services, etc. through Pages on Facebook.

Is it a big deal for the Pages themselves and the entities behind them? Let’s just say it’s not a negative thing.

For those with fervent actual fans, it may feel like a bit of a step down in loyalty, but frankly those people will show you allegiance in other more tangible ways such as engagement and financial commitment. It may be that you take the issue into your own hands by creating exclusive clubs within (through Groups) or outside to help separate the super-fans.

But for most administrators of a Facebook Page the change will be a welcome one. It reduces the level of affinity needed to want more information from, or express endorsement of. They rightly have seen how easily and voluminously users have taken to “Like” on the most minute of posts, so to extend that on a more macro level makes sense. And Pages will benefit – watch for a surge in “Likers Formally Known As Fans” (or, “Subscribers” as you’ll notice Facebook sometimes uses in certain contexts) once it goes into action and the process becomes the norm.

We were joking with “Fans” on our Facebook Page about the levels of commitment Facebook might employ (“hearts” or “admit you’re non-commitally fond of”) and truly we’re just talking about semantics here. When you add in the upcoming changes that could impact Pages due to Facebook’s location plans, you’ll further appreciate a low barrier of psychological entry for “Likes” over “Fandom” when someone is just casually passing by your location (I won’t be a fan of something I don’t know much about, but I can “Like” what you’re about and want to check you out more later).

-Dean (@dbrowell)

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