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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
I so much want to fall in love with the wide-open architecture of Facebook Platform. Here's the thing, though -- I definitely haven't spent enough time tinkering with it to know for sure, but my initial impression is that Facebook is literally an ill-fitting suit for me in its present incarnation. I use s/n tools for *professional* networking and to participate in exertions of collective power. I'm 20 years out of college -- for me, my alma mater is an irrelevant context for networking. I like the way my LinkedIn experienced is centered around *my* professional network. I'm not sure yet if I'm going to be able to achieve that in Facebook -- will I be able to literally move my college stuff and Facebook's own apps out of the way, so that I can put the networks and web services that I do use front and center?
I agree with the photo on Linked In...
But I also enjoy what it represents by not having a photo, too.
Facebook seems easier to navigate upon first glance, but I've done less business networking there.
In fact, I'm finding that I'm "saving" Facebook for people I actually know, or want to have meaningful interaction with.
MySpace can be difficult to navigate with 15,000 friends - and I'm not sure I could handle that kind of load on another social networking site.
One thing is for sure. They're all addicting.
How do you ever find time to not only USE all of these sites, but then to critique them and write meaningful articles about their affect on society?
You rock Chris.
:)
LinkedIn has subsequently been hijacked by the mass-adders, which is too bad for those of us who valued the personal recommendations that were once a reason to be part of that site.
Mike O'Hara has a great interview with Dan Nye on Episode 33 of the Cold Calling Podcast (http://coldcallingpodcast.com/). It must be an interesting situation to be in... watching something you've developed and nurtured getting pushed onto a completely different track.
I think Linked-In is going to be slow to change. We see the value in social networking and friend sourcing, but a lot of people aren't ready for that kind of openness. They still work the old network style. As long as they have a good customer base like that it is going to be in their best interest to stay a one focus tool - provide employment networking.
I guess I'm somewhat of a social experiment myself as my "professional" presence is on Linked-In at least my old profession, but my new media persona (which really just me) is on Facebook.
So far I've had more people initiate contact with me from LinkedIn, than I have from Facebook. We'll see how that evolves as I do more new media.
Chris Brogan: each network serves its own purpose and does the things it's supposed to do well.
I have continued to use my LinkedIn and have found many old friends and co workers. Perhaps a better integration into Facebook is the answer?
Facebook has one thing that drives me nuts. I see pages I can never find again, something's wrong with the navigation (or my brain) that makes finding things unintuitive.
http://www.cnn.com/SHOWBIZ/Movies/usual_suspect...
Actually, blogging has been my best social networking tool. It brings people to me and also gives me a base of contact with fellow bloggers.
I had a MySpace page and it got swamped by wannabe rap stars.
I'm helping with a Ning network. That's such a clunky interface without having that much. It's awkward like YouTube's control panel is awkward. It's hard to figure out where to go to do things that you should be able to view and alter from one control panel and they both disperse everything in a way that's counterintuitive.
I set up a Facebook account, tried to do something, it didn't make sense, I can't stand to learn another interface. I'd rather be learning WAP or PHP or something like that.
I've got LinkedIn and I'll keep using it cause it's simple and more of a "digital resume".
I doubt Facebook will be a part of my life and I really only expect to continue on LinkedIn where I'm open to getting more social since I'm happy with the basics.
Or what I'm planning on doing with my domain name is creating a page with all the relevant social media sites I have a profile on. I won't put my Facebook link on there but I will definitely list my LinkedIn.
I came here after finding your LinkedIn profile linked to your response to Chris Heuer's "Who is your favorite food or wine blogger?" question--another thing LinkedIN does better (that adds value and builds community, actually) than Facebook.
More thoughts at: Tech PR Gems
Million Impossible is worth a look, all feedback welcomed