From the monthly archives:

August 2009

Add some OOMPH to your social media activities!

August 30, 2009

On Monday, August 31, 2009 TweetLater.com will be known as SocialOomph.com. TweetLater.com has decided to change their name in order to be able accommodate future expansion and to make sure that their brand won’t be in conflict of any legal rights of Twitter. “We are focusing more on providing productivity solutions to our users” according to TweetLater.com and the change of name is “an unsolicited, proactive and preemptive action on our side”. For TweetLater Users it is recommended that you do the following;

TweetLater is now SocialOomph

TweetLater is now SocialOomph

  • White-list the email address emailservice@socialoomph.com , by doing so you will still continue to received your keyword alerts and other communication from TweetLater.com.
  • For your convenience make sure to bookmark http://www.socialoomph.com.
  • After the transition all traffic to tweetlater.com will be redirected to socialoomph.com.
  • Change tweetlater” to “socialoomph” in the URL after August 31st if you are using a Status feed.
  • You don’t need to change your log in information
  • Exciting additions of the services of socialoomph.com is something that you would look forward to.

I think this is a great move and while TweetLater has become a household name with many users you must always think big.  SocialOomph leaves a lot of room to grow in size and service.  I don’t particularly like the name, but I’m sure I’ll get used to it.

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Social Media Landscape by Fred Cavazza Redux

August 21, 2009

Following last year’s first version of my Social Media Landscape, I am induced to publish a new version to sync with the market’s latest evolutions. And I a not the only one: The Conversation Prism v2.0.

This new landscape is now spitted into four main usages (expressing, sharing, networking, playing) and is structured around social platforms which ambition is to cover each user’s needs.

Social Media Landscape (redux)

Social Media Landscape (redux)

The large size version is here : Social Media Landscape (redux).

Four Main Usages

The various tools and services displayed on this landscape are listed bellow.

1. Expressing tools allow users to express themselves, discuss and aggregate their social life:

2. Sharing tools allow users to publish and share content:

3. Networking tools allow users to search, connect and interact with each other’s:

4. Playing services that now integrate strong social features:

From Social Networks to social Platform

At the center of this landscape we will find former social networks, which have evolved to progressively integrate more and more functionalities and morphed themselves into social platforms. The notion of ‘platform‘ is particularly relevant since those network have the ability to host applications (mostly the one you find on the four main usages).

We can split social platforms into two groups: The First Generation which have been existing since more then 5 years and gather between 50 and 200 millions of users (Facebook, MySpace, Friendster, Bebo, Orkut, Skyrock, Hi5, Windows Live…) and The New Wave of social players which have a similar offering and a fast growing audience (between 20 and 50 millions users – Netlog, Imeem, Piczo, Lexode, Hyves, Buzznet, Xanga, Zorpia…).

I won’t enter in the debate to foresight which platform will grow faster or which will appeal the most to youth audience but I anticipate a rough competition for Facebook which is stile experiencing cash flow problem by sticking to the advertising model while those new social players have integrated micro-transactions and premium membership in their business model.

Google and Yahoo! are still absent from the social scene (wait, maybe not…)

You will also notice in this landscape the discretion of Google and Yahoo! which are ‘only’ represented by services that did not managed to break through the social scene (while being strong references, Blogger, YouTube, FlickR cannot be considered has dominant social platforms). Let’s be honest: MySpace and Facebook decently steal the spotlight from Google and Yahoo!.

Wait… maybe not if you consider Google as a being in a much more favorable situation with lower-level services like Gmail (one needs an email to register Facebook, right?) or Google Maps (can you count the number of social services relying on Google mapping tool?). Add to this there current cash situation and it leaves them plenty of time to sharpen their social strategy (Maybe by buying Twitter or FriendFeed, or booth!).

The same is true for Yahoo! which can rely on a massive user base (still outnumbering Facebook’s one) and essential social bricks like Delicious, Yahoo! Pipes, MyBlogLog and the promising Fire Eagle.

Did I mention Microsoft? Yes, Microsoft, those guys behind Hotmail, MSN and Windows Live. Ignoring them would be a big mistake and Mark Z. was more than happy to welcome them in FB’s capital.

From this pint of view, I expect a very thought battle around authentication services (Facebook Connect, Google Accounts…) allowing social platforms to exist outside of their boundaries and to export their members’ social graph. Big players like Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft have to emphasis their legitimacy as historical web players to keep control over their users.

I strongly recommend you to pay attention to those different services (yes, there is a life outside Facebook) and I shall meet you next year for a third version!

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