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Unit Structures: Social Networking in 2007

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Over the past few days, I've enjoyed reading lists of tech predictions for 2007. Some favorites include Mashable, R/W Web, Ypulse, Web+, Lynetter's predictions and Jason Caplain's series of VC Predictions.

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Over the past few days, I've enjoyed reading lists of tech predictions for 2007. Some favorites include Mashable, R/W Web, Ypulse, Web+, Lynetter's predictions and Jason Caplain's series of VC Predictions. A bunch of these lists include predictions about how social networking will change in 2007. Some I agreed with, some I didn't - so I figured I'd contribute my own thoughts on what 2007 might hold for the SNS space.

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First and foremost, 2007 will be a shakeout year in the SNS space. There are simply too many upstart social networks competing for the same audience. The most important asset a social network can posses is community, and communities are pooling in the premier social networks (Myspace, Bebo, Facebook). This pooling of community, or network effect, drives lock-in and gives the users less incentives to explore new social networks. As a result, a number of companies are going to take it on the nose.

Of course, in any market, companies enter and exit regularly. With the Open Source stack, and languages like Ruby or PHP, almost anyone could create a SNS site. Simply because there is a shakeout doesn't mean the market is slowing - it simply means people are demonstrating their preferences. And more often than not, people choose community over features or niche-orientation. With this in mind, let's look at what 2007 holds for SNS.

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The rich will get richer
Expect to see growth in the premier social network sites. Sites like Facebook, Bebo, Hi5 and Xanga will leverage their existing communities to drive increases in membership in 2007. Put quite simply, people want to be where other people are. To that extent, the networks contained in these sites will serve to draw others in. Of course, Myspace will still continue to growin 2007, but I'd fully expect these A-list-but-not-Myspace SNS to see strong growth across 2007. It seems that the average SNS user can actively use about 2 profiles. Since Myspace has a lock on one of these, the market is fighting for the other.

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The niche play isn't enough
A lot of new SNS entrants are niche-oriented. Unfortunately, simply being a niche play isn't enough to guarantee success. We can look at these niche social networks as the modern equivalent of the bulletin board community. Research any specialty interest around the web, and you're likely to find a mailing list or forum or poorly designed website that serves the needs of this community. The SNS that wishes to come in and replace this forum or website lacks content, community and search placement. It will be a very tough slog.

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Therefore, how do you successfully niche orient a SNS? First, you can find an underserved market, or a market that didn't really exist previously without the social dimension. One I can think of is Mychurch.org, a SNS for places of worship. You also need to seed content - if you want to build a SNS for patients or new parents, for example, ,you need to have more than just community - you need to have great content that incentivizes people to come back. Without the content dimension, a good number of niche social networks will fail.

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Established communities will go social
Ebay. Amazon. Wikipedia. Motley Fool. New York Times. What do these sites all have in common? They are large content sites with enormous communities. As the web goes social, individuals in these communities want to meet, learn about, learn from or even date fellow members of these communities. Therefore, it makes a lot of sense for established communities to introduce social and profile aspects to their communities. First, it is a move that will get tech pundits talking, and the cluetrain folks applauding, as it embraces social and conversational aspects of community. Second, it will increase engagement between customers, therefore increasing the amount of time people will spend on the site. It also increases the amount of social capital individuals invest into their relationship with the content site, ultimately making individuals ambassadors of the brands into which they invest time.

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Community will emerge around shared experience
YouTube is a shared experience. You send me a video, I watch it, we talk about it. Millions of people of all ages do this every day. The social web is one of shared experiences, and video is a prime example of this phenomenon. Over the next year, we'll find lots of new ways to have shared social experiences, and there's a good chance that rich media will be centric to these experiences.

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OpenID will bridge social networks.
Walled-garden community helps the rich get richer in the SNS space (see prediction one). However, as SNS becomes more integrated into our social lives, the masses are going to expect interoperability. OpenID stands as the natural, simple solution to interoperability between social networks. We can expect to see some upstart players adopt OpenID in 2007, but it also makes sense for Myspace or Facebook to adopt OpenID. Rather than people leaving Myspace or Facebook to try new SNS, they could simply use OpenID to log into these new sites with their pre-existing profiles. It makes a lot of sense, and it is a strong business move. The profile is the center of the social universe - social network designers should adopt OpenID so they can answer their customers needs.

Ok, these are my major predictions for 2007 - now how about my contrarian predictions?

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Social networking will not go mobile in 2007.
Sure, lots of vendors are going to offer SNS on mobiles in 2007, but it won't catch on to become a major force. With data plans and handsets as they are, mobile use just doesn't match our use expectations of SNS. SNS is about browsing - and until mobiles let people richly and cost-effectively browse, our phones are going to remain glorified address books.

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We can only support one or two profiles.
We may log on to lots of sites, but we can really only actively keep personas on one or two sites. We're not entering a future where everyone has five social networking profiles. It just isn't gonna happen. And that's going to hurt the industry.

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Social networking must get less complicated, not more complicated.
Features are a way SNS differentiate themselves from the competition. How many times have I heard that a new SNS has all the features of Myspace "plus extra features." Unfortunately, the market is not choosing SNS based on features. SNS designers should simplify, make their sites faster, remove walls and barriers, and open up as much as possible.

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Social networking might not exist in 2008.
Social networks are the new portals. In 2008 we may look at an upstart social network the way we look at a search company trying to take on Google. 2007 is going to be the year the big SNS players portalize in a major way, perhaps to the extent that we may not even recognize the Facebook or Myspace of 2006 in 2008.

Agree or disagree, I think that 2007 is going to be the year of shakeout and transformation for social networking. However, there's still a lot of money to be made in the area by new entrants. We'll conclude these predictions by looking at some of these areas. What are the social networking areas currently being missed by the market?

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The post-collegiate job market.
I like LinkedIn, but the site completely misses the *huge* market of post-collegiate employment. Why? These people don't really have "professional network" - they may not have much experience but they are going to get high-paying jobs from many top companies. Why is there not a social network that serves to bridge employers and potential employees in this vital market? Employers want to know who they are hiring, and employees want to know what kind of people the companies hire. By introducing this transparency, everyone in this huge market segment benefits. Young people need their own "professional network" - one that is less stodgy than LinkedIn. Idealist.org is a good start.

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Meta-social networks.
Youtube was largely successful because it allowed its content to be embedded in Myspace. Mybloglog is successful among the A-list of bloggers for the same reason. There's a whole lot of content areas that can be managed by meta-social networks, that can be embedded in the "main" profiles of individuals. I've spoken to a few entrepreneurs that are creating social networks around charitable giving - this is the perfect type of information that can be meta-embedded in blogs and main social network profiles.

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Real-life connections.
The social web is about bridging offline to online connections. Upstart social networks that effectively move offline conversation online will find success in 2007.

In 2007, designers of social networks face significant challenges. The top players - Myspace, Bebo, Facebook - are becoming as difficult to dethrone as Google. Designing a SNS is designing a community - something very difficult because most community comes from the bottom up, not the top down. Social network designers must think about the needs their site will answer, what privileges use of the SNS will grant - and most importantly, how their site will be marketed virally. What will get people talking about your SNS at parties in 2007?

There's still a lot of area to make inroads into this space - just as in search we had Altavista and Excite and Dogpile (remember when they were the major players?), there may be a Google of SNS still lurking out there. Although I'm skeptical about that, what fun would it be if there wasn't competition and new ideas coming into the market? 2007 is going to be the year social networks begin portalizing and mainstream further; I expect it is going to be an interesting year.

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Fred,

This is a really good post.

I think you lay out a lot of ideas and challenges where we need to focus when it comes to online social networking.

Niche SNS have a few more years to prove they have wsorking non-profit model. It's interesting. A lot of people on the application and implementation side of things, especially among non-profits (my current working domain), are still learning about how models like YouTube, Facebook, MySpace, can work for their causes. My belief, really a hunch, has been that SNS are more conducive to the non-profit community (particularly professional associations) more than private business... inherent SNS value is an investment for later return.. generally speaking, so far it does not seem to be very good at a direct return (e.g. ad dollars). Adoption occurs more slowly within non-profits, so I think there is still time for SNS to penetrate that "industry"... and perhaps establish a kind of acceptance and normative value.

I do agree that the Mega Sites will begin to solidify market share in the business sector. And OpenID may play a significant factor. I believe you're right when you suggest this is where we are headed as people compile multuple profiles across multiple sites.

A need to simplify should eventually reach critical mass.. especially as the Facebook generation transitions into the post-collegiate stages (as you point out). I think this cohort, currently about age range 20-24, will be an important influence when it comes to evolving online SNS development, and how SNS can support offline goals and activities.

Happy New Year to you and your blog community.

Keep up the great work in 2007.


- Paul

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At January 03, 2007 1:56 AM, zephoria said...

I agree with a lot of what you argue but let me play contrarian for a moment. I think that there's a lot of potential to go mobile OUTSIDE OF THE US. I don't think that it will look like or feel like the web version but it will be SNS all the same (with "friends" and "comments" and weirdo forms of profiles that allow for some form of "presence").

(I don't have the same faith in interoperability that you have, but you know that. I'd love your thoughts on my recent post.)

But overall, i totally agree that it's a shakeout year. (And i intend to run to cover writing a dissertation.)

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At January 03, 2007 9:03 AM, Lars said...

Hi,

Great post...

Agree with zephoria that social networking on mobile could be a huge potential in markets where the internet isn't as wide spread as the US and the mobile penetration is much larger. But how to make it simple enough and still appealing for mobile users? It may not be social networking exactly as we know it from the web. It could be oriented around the phone's internal phone book for example and the communication log in the phone, which opens up some really interesting possibilities.

And is it possible to make the web based social networks interoperable with a 'lesser' mobile social network or are they so different that there would be no point.

- Lars

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At January 03, 2007 9:04 AM, Fred Stutzman said...

Paul, danah - Thanks for the great comments. Paul, I agree that niches get time to prove themselves. Community will form organically in some niches, but the success may not be as apparent or as newsworthy as prior SNS stories.

danah - The mean barrier I see to mobile are handsets and data plans. Anywhere where the phones are media-rich and data plans cheap, I can see mobile social networking taking off. Mix in things like location-awareness and you've got a really killer combo. However, with data plans and handsets where they are in 2007, I don't see mobile taking off in the 2007 space. Most college students carry Razr's or the like...good phones but not wifi, etc. So I think that's the roadblock here....not much else.

Now, with regards to profile interop, I'm not really talking about profile transferrability - which I think is sort of what you're talking about with re-created ephemeral profiles. I guess in my vision a single profile is placeful, and then you use that profile to log in to other SNS. (i.e. My facebook identity would show up as a friend to your myspace account) So it is a slightly different vision. I agree it is way down the pipeline...it would take a lot of industry work to get it going. However, I do think 2007 is goinig to be a big year for OpenId so who knows ;)

Regarding shakeout...there are just too many fly-by-night social nets out there..I think a lot of one and two employee shops are going to close up in the shakeout. The bigger ones I think are insulated. But if you don't have lots of users...perhaps there may be some mergers too!

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At January 03, 2007 9:18 AM, James Hurrell said...

Hey Fred,

Happy New Year to you. Great post, very succinct. Quick question: Functionality/ productivity, interoperability, great branding... what else goes into the recipe for a web 2.0 SNS start-up to give the best chance of success?

This morning I've been talking with colleagues about how online functionality meets online identity (as we have, need and potentially gain benefit from each). You mention that niche SNS sites will need content. I presume this will initially mean RSS feeds to external sources or centrally created content (e-zine as part of the offering, with journalistic team as part of the SNS staff)?

But how about functionality? For example, integrating a full IMAP email service akin to the wonderful. Mac into the SNS-centred experience. This moves the technology to where I predict it's going - collaborative networks. You say that features aren't important but what do you mean by that?

"I've spoken to a few entrepreneurs that are creating social networks around charitable giving - this is the perfect type of information that can be meta-embedded in blogs and main social network profiles." Can you tell me more about this, as this is what I'm working on (developing niche SNS to facilitate philanthropy, integrating productivity features)?

@Paul Diperna - completely agree and am also working on this. My interest is in using SNS technology to enable people to create and share their online identities (as individuals, groups or companies etc), increase productivity and affect real change in the world.

Thanks, James

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At January 03, 2007 4:29 PM, Webomatica said...

Great post. I think you do a good job of outlining the positive plus the challenges for 2007. I do agree that it's just a matter of time before the big players start adding social aspects to their user base. The question is if the management at said companies is too clueless to get it done - or they would rather just buy an existing web 2.0 company to get the technology.

I also think your mention of "meta social" is a hot area as with MyBlogLog. There are a lot of people who have their own sites that want to add community and share viewers with others but don't want to hand all their content over to the social sites. Stuff like MyBlogLog or other social widgets are pretty neat ways to find a medium. Lots of opportunity there.

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At January 03, 2007 6:19 PM, Anonymous said...

"Why is there not a social network that serves to bridge employers and potential employees in this vital market? Employers want to know who they are hiring, and employees want to know what kind of people the companies hire. By introducing this transparency, everyone in this huge market segment benefits."

Hi Fred, have you looked at doostang.com?

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At January 03, 2007 6:35 PM, Fred Stutzman said...

Re: Doostang, I've seen it a few times. But with that name and the look/feel of the front page, the project doesn't look quite ready for prime time, at least on the level I'm envisioning.

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At January 04, 2007 1:33 PM, Charlie said...

Really great post... Totally agree on the LinkedIn, "Jr."/Idealist for every industry concept... It's amazing to me how badly students and recent alumni miss the ball when it comes to online management of their careers. I don't know if career is just a bad word and they don't want to think about it, but you'd think that a generation so tech savvy would be really interested in connecting via more professional social networks to share jobs, professional interests, etc... perhaps its just never been taught be career planning and they think the web is just for recreational socializing? I just don't get it. Thanks... I needed a few things to blog about today.

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At January 04, 2007 2:42 PM, Andrew said...

As community tends to emerge around shared experience, I suspect that the sites being experienced are not best suited to indentify, cultivate, and leverage the blooming community. Your example of YouTube is terrific. YouTube's not designed to encourage socialization; it's design to make you watch and contribute as many videos as possible. SN features were built at YouTube to encourage more video discovery and distribution.

It seems like there's an opportunity for a meta social network to insert theirselves into shared experience sites (like YouTube) and encourage social interaction via widgets.

MyBlogLog is a great start, but I imagine blog widgets that direct a user to a different portal doesn't go far enough. More interaction in-widget is necessary.

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At January 04, 2007 5:13 PM, guy said...

> The mean barrier I see to mobile are handsets and data plans.

What a great post. I have little experience -and low expectations- in this space but reading your comments was such an eye opener. Thank you.

I think there are other considerations when it comes to the mobile journey in the US

- tight grip from carriers
- lack of iddle time

Bear in mind I didn't say "spare" time but iddle. Some of the greatest mobile successes in Asia ocurr due to lengthy commutes on public transportation and that is just one case. If you study the gambling markets as well as the adult markets expansions into mobile you could see what kind of obstacles same industries faced in the US.

According to your post, both myspace and youtube are aberrations as they don't really serve a community, at least, in the narrowest of senses. There may be other motivations at work, some not so openly embraced -as myspace served as a platform for the adult industry far and wide-. So many of this webspaces are governed by the self interest of the people joining them, each of which wants to extract some kind of juice for their own benefit. Hardly the definition of a community...

What a gem if one could find -and define- an offline group of people who are connected in some way without even knowing it and crystalizing that sentiment in a social network. Professionals?

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At January 04, 2007 10:55 PM, FERNANDO ARDENGHI said...

My bet is:

* Age segmentation will trigger the "fun" social_networking market to merge with the fun_online_dating market, mainly for 13-25 years old persons (teenagers). Many sites are only cheap channels for deliver ads, i.e. infomercial-advertainment companies on the web!

* the "quality" social_networking market will overlap with the quality_online_dating market: mainly for 26-and more years old persons. Clients will pay for quality contacts (compatible real persons) and to avoid being hurt in their feelings by other persons. They know the difference between real friends from casual acquaintances.

* business_networking will peak and decay.

Regards,
Fernando Ardenghi.
Buenos Aires.
Argentina.
ardenghifer@gmail.com

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At January 05, 2007 9:40 PM, jkd said...

I definitely agree that existing websites should go social, but I'm just not sure that they have the werewithal to do so. Some of them do - I'd say WaPo rather than NYT, given the general approach to online strategy thus far. It's a process that might start in 2007 - even probably will start - but I'm not sure if enough people in established non-SNS contexts really "get" social software, yet.

Heck, I'm not sure that I get it, for whatever that's worth.

I think one thing that you're not hitting on, here is the user experience side. Given the spate of recent crossings-over of SNS context to meatspace consequences (e.g., the Peyton Strickland tragedy) and some initial evidence that users don't fully realize the extent of their exposure via SNS profiles, 2007 might be the year when users really start drawing back from full exposure and/or more fully explicating their ideas of who should know what about them.

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At January 09, 2007 4:08 PM, Brian said...

Hey thanks for linking to my predictions on web+. I think you're spot on about the rich getting richer. Some of these established communities are already social, its just not as readily apparent. Amazon was web2.0 before that was even a trendy term (user reviews)

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At January 14, 2007 7:57 PM, yaromir said...

Nice post. Mobile social networking in Japan is more popular than web-based. Its specific feature is that it is closely linked to real-life. Here is the latest example of niche mobile SNS, targeting young moms:
http://analytica1st.com/analytica1st/2007/01/mobile-social-network-mamasa-targets-at.htm

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At January 15, 2007 7:52 AM, David Ingram said...

Hi Fred, interesting article which I have referenced from my blog (www.dpingram.com). Hope you dont mind. D.

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At February 21, 2007 4:41 AM, Anonymous said...

I really love the ideas of your social networking in 2007. I will take with what you have to say about social networking
sites and use that information to my advantage.

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38 Backlinks

tametheweb.com: Ten Tech Trends for Librarians 2007
I wanted this post to be out on the day I spoke at the Ontario Library Association with Amanda Etches-Johnson and John Blyberg at the OLITA Top Tech Trends panel, but my dissertation, teaching and life intervene. ...

Michael · February 28, 2007 10:52 AM

www.trends.tw: 2007/01/26 Trends 2.0 隨手摘
[2007/01/25 - 2007/01/26] 2007/01/26 Trends 2.0 隨手摘. The China Blog - TIME. 01/26 15:36, 2007. 引述:『《時代》週刊最近推出了「The China Blog」,Simon Elegant 是北京分社的新主編,Susan Jakes是北京分社的記者,Bill Powell、Austin Ramzy ...

vista · January 26, 2007 4:25 PM

patrickneeley.com: Social Networking Trends
I recently read an interesting article about current trends relating to social networking.http://chimprawk.blogspot.com/2007/01/social-networking-in-2007.html. Here are a few main points the author touched on that caught my attention. ...

Patrick · January 24, 2007 8:11 AM

blogville.net.au: Let the Shakeout Begin
Many fingers are pointing to an impending shakeout in the social networking / web2 space. In 2006 nearly half a billion dollars was dished out by venture capital firms on a raft of flashy new startups that have, for the most part, ...

milesmenegon · January 22, 2007 10:51 PM

kokogiko.net: Firefox3.0はOpenID対応、OpenID認証のApacheモジュール
Plaggerで翻訳メール送るようにしたはいいが、翻訳結果では改行が無視されるので引用 部分で何がなんだか判らなくなり、原文みるよりウザかったのでやっぱり追えていないOpenID メーリングリストですが。 知らないうちにいろいろ仕様が増えてて、もうサパー ...

nene2001 · January 19, 2007 8:42 PM

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www.emergic.org: TECH TALK: 2007 Tech Trends: 4. Verticalisation
We have seen the creation of the horizontal winners in search and social networks. Google, MySpace, Facebook are the big players. As they become big, they also have their own challenges. While verticalisation has been talked about for ...

· January 20, 2007 3:41 PM

www.informatik.umu.se: 2007 predictions
Fred Stutzman has written his 2007 predictions regarding social networking. I find his predictions very interesting and agree with him on several things. It seems likely that “2007 will be a shakeout year in the SNS space”. ...

Daniel · January 15, 2007 9:57 AM

longstock.blogspot.com: Social networking predictions for 2007
Here is an excellent article written by Fred Stutzman entitled Social Networking in 2007 on how the social networking space (SNS) will evolve in 2007. Here are a few snippets... - The average person can only actively use two profiles; ...

David Ingram · January 15, 2007 7:41 AM

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community.nebraska.edu: Social Networking in 2007
Unit Structures. Excellent article written by Fred Stutzman entitled Social Networking in 2007 on how the social networking space (SNS) will evolve in 2007. Very interesting observations. - 2007 will be a shakeout year in the SNS space. ...

AmyStephen · January 13, 2007 2:18 AM

www.effetphi.ch: links for 2007-01-12
La Vie pourrait avoir été découverte sur Mars il ya 30 ans - Futura-Sciences.com. (tags: science). Slashdot | Social Network Fatigue Coming? (tags: socialnetworking web2.0 socialsoftware myspace). Unit Structures: Social Networking in ...

ff · January 12, 2007 5:19 PM

blog.lymabean.com: Media Measurement and Modeling l Part Two
After about five sleepless nights I think our team has finally redefined the basic style in which we can show how we will monetize Lymabean. Not having a financial background, but very strong in mathematical skills and formulas, I ...

lindsey · January 11, 2007 1:27 PM

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www.technomojo.info: links for 2007-01-11
Unit Structures: Social Networking in 2007. (tags: social web2.0 socialnetworking trends 2007 networking SNS). HP Learning Center - free online software, business, marketing and IT classes for small and medium business ...

mojodenbow · January 11, 2007 10:23 AM

rnayak.wordpress.com: Social Networks in 2007
I just read this amazing article which highlights what social networks will do in 2007. Its understandable that there are just too many such networks and the space is getting really crowded. So what will these socionets do? ...

itsmeritesh · January 11, 2007 6:52 AM

www.resonancepartnership.com: links for 2007-01-11
Yahoo At The Center Of The Social Universe: But Where's The Integration? (tags: social networks, media, yahoo). Unit Structures: Social Networking in 2007. (tags: socialnetworking ,2007 ,trends, aggregation, niche, online) ...

Marianne Richmond · January 10, 2007 10:32 PM

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blog.mengjun.org: Will OpenID Bridge Social Networks?
Just like it is hard to live a double life (have you every been a spy? Mr. and Mrs. Smith), it is not easy to maintain multiple identities and profiles online. Every site needs to sign up with a password with slightly different rules, ...

Jessie M. · January 10, 2007 1:20 PM

www.socialnetworking.jp: 2007年のSNSはこうなる予測
Unit Structures: Social Networking in 2007. 2007年のトレンド予測。 1.富める ものはより富む. すでにある程度の人を抱えているSNS、MYSpaceは当然ながら、他の たとえばFacebook、Bebo、Hi5、Xanga などのMySpace以外のSNSの活躍が期待できる。 ...

sns · January 10, 2007 11:17 AM

chimprawk.blogspot.com: Pew on Social Networks: 7 out of 10 teens have non-public profiles
This afternoon, the Pew Internet and American Life Project released data from their recent survey of teen Social Networks use. Needless to say, the data is very interesting, and offers data affirming some of the themes we're seeing in ...

Fred Stutzman · January 07, 2007 4:38 PM

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www.visible-networking.com: NET - The Social Networking Week #1 (January 2007)
Happy New Year! I hope you all had a great time at the end of 2006. As far as I am concerned, December have been extremely busy: I started a new exciting and challenging job at SWIFT in November, and it will keep me busy for a while. ...

Chris · January 07, 2007 4:45 AM

chimprawk.blogspot.com: Thoughts on Mobile Social Networks
In my recent post about social networking in 2007, my predictions about mobile sparked some good discussion and comments. Here's what I said:. 1) Social networking will not go mobile in 2007. Sure, lots of vendors are going to offer SNS ...

Fred Stutzman · January 06, 2007 12:58 PM

blog.klasroggenkamp.de: Social Network Cleanup und das Mobile-Präfix
Über Apophenia bin ich gerade auf ein paar Gedanken zu Social Networks gestoßen: in der Quintessenz lese ich daraus, dass a) Communities in ihrem Wachstumspotential überschätzt sind, b) da im nächsten Jahr einiges an Konsolidierung und ...

Klas Roggenkamp · January 06, 2007 10:07 AM

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www.emergic.org: Social Networking in 2007
Fred Stutzman writes: "2007 will be a shakeout year in the SNS space. There are simply too many upstart social networks competing for the same audience. The most important asset a social network can posses is community, and communities ...

· January 09, 2007 6:40 PM

www.best-free.com: For Social Networks, 2007 is about MONEY
The most important market challenge for social networks in 2007 can be summarized in three words: monetization, monetization, and monetization. Regardless of whether social networks will splinter into niches and verticals (eg sports, ...

admin · January 05, 2007 3:59 PM

www.thisisgoingtobebig.com: links for 2007-01-05
Black Sheep. (tags: movies funny). Unit Structures: Social Networking in 2007. (tags: community socialnetworking web2.0 facebook myspace postonmelater fordhamclass). Browser Statistics. (tags: browser stats resolution)

CEO · January 05, 2007 5:18 AM

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zeroinfluence.wordpress.com: links for 2007-01-05
OVGuide - Online Video Guide. pick a channel, any channel. viva la niche. (tags: video guide movies Videos videocasting). TeeVee4Me - The Twilight Zone. OMG. (tags: twilight zone). Debugging life. Anyone can signup for an account, ...

zeroinfluencer · January 04, 2007 7:48 PM

www.moremusings.com: Social Network Fatigue
One of the predictions for 2007 is Social Netwotk Fatigue claiming that users will get tired of social networks, especially actively participating in multiple of them. Danha Boyd thinks the problem is the large-scale, portal-style ...

Viil · January 04, 2007 4:02 PM

www.moremusings.com: Users can only support one or two profiles simultaneously
In his social networking in 2007 predictions Fred Stutzman claims that people will only be able to actively keep up profiles on one or two social network sites. “We may log on to lots of sites, but we can really only actively keep ...

Viil · January 04, 2007 3:44 PM

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snapjudge.blogspot.com: Unit Structures: Social Networking in 2007
Unit Structures: Social Networking in 2007.

Boston Bala · January 04, 2007 10:02 AM

bocowgill.com: OVER AT CHRIS ANDERSON'S LONG TAIL BLOG, the Wired...
OVER AT CHRIS ANDERSON'S LONG TAIL BLOG, the Wired Magazine editor is updating the death-of-the-blockbuster stats. Elsewhere, a social networking expert (who runs a highly recommended blog) makes his predictions for the year. ...

Bo · January 04, 2007 6:45 AM

www.thezoneread.com: links for 2007-01-04
An Engine Fit For My Proceeding · Snowball Visuals. The SL, machinima crowd will love this. Be sure and take a look, Jim. (tags: sl machinima). Unit Structures: Social Networking in 2007. Fred Stutzman predicts the future of Social ...

Paul Walker · January 03, 2007 11:35 PM

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nowuseit.com: links for 2007-01-04
Four Eyed Monsters » Blog Archive » “Humanity Lobotomy”. Net Neutrality Open Source Documentary. (tags: media smartmobs freedom culture Internet neutrality net socialsoftware). Tools. The Information Architecture Institute’s Tools ...

Martin · January 03, 2007 11:31 PM

weblog.terrellrussell.com: How Plasticity of Identity doesn’t hold up
danah boyd seems to be stirring up discussion again… Teens are not dreaming of portability (like so many adults i meet). They are happy to make new accounts on new sites; they enjoy building out profiles. (Part of this could be that ...

Terrell Russell · January 03, 2007 9:56 PM

andylark.blogs.com: Blinks & Links
Edelman launches a writing blog. Michael Arrington's list of Web 2.0 companies in 2007 he can't live without. This Cringely article captures the Web 2.0 startup phenomena from the point of view of the VC’s. Stowe's Ten Thoughts for 2007 ...

Andrew Lark · January 03, 2007 6:20 PM

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onlinedatingpost.com: Social Networking in 2007
Fred Stutzman has a great list of predictions for SNS in 2007, and some good contrarian points of view. puppy, social networking, unit+structures.

dave@digicraft.com · January 03, 2007 4:09 PM

www.stoweboyd.com: Fred Stutzman on Social Networking In 2007
Fred forecasts continued expansion in social networking in 2007 (no surprise), but in particular, I agree with his prognosis for large established sites going social:. Established communities will go social. Ebay. Amazon. Wikipedia. ...

Stowe Boyd · January 03, 2007 3:26 PM

lars.roland.bz: Will and should social networks go mobile? Or will mobile go social?
Fred Stutzman just wrote a good blog article about what will happen in 2007 with social networking. His opinion is that social networks will not have success with going mobile in 2007. That may be true or not, but if they do, ...

lars · January 03, 2007 10:07 AM

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liangzhigou.wordpress.com: Unit Structures: Fred Stutzman Blog
Read this blog!

liang zhi gou · January 03, 2007 6:58 AM

www.zephoria.org: some thoughts on 2007 (advertising, bullying, and mobile)
I love the idea of "social network fatigue." I can see the Prozac ad now:. Are you tired of your friends? Does reciprocity get you down? Do you dream of blockmodels? Are you afraid of the big bad structural holes? ...

zephoria · January 03, 2007 3:01 AM

www.ibiblio.org: Shake out in Social Networking?
Fred is predicting the 2007 changes in the Social Networking space. Hint: Shake out, consolidations and transformations. The details are the devil. Read his post.

Paul · January 02, 2007 3:52 PM

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