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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Social networking may be in your genes

Some people are avid social networkers and build up huge numbers of "connections" and "friends" online. Take a look at Thomas Power, the Chairman of Ecademy, for instance. He has over 15,000 contacts in Ecademy and almost as many in LinkedIn. Does he really know all those people? If you think he's in a fix, consider Ron Bates - LinkedIn's top networker who has almost 40,000 connections.

Facebook appears to limit the number of friends. Steve Hofstetter, for instance, managed to amass over 200,000 friends, but was cutback by Facebook to a puny 5,000. Charlie Rosenbury reportedly had a similar reduction in his friends list. These limits are probably more to do with the loads on Facebook's servers than anything else. But it does raise the question, why do people have so many connections and friends online?

You would have thought, for instance, that with all the hype about online social networking that teenagers would be avid networkers. Indeed, the media coverage would have us believe that MySpace and so on are full of spotty youths. However, a recent report on teens and social media suggests otherwise.

Networking teens are already social
The research behind the report shows some interesting facts, according to Dr John M. Grohol. He points out that only 6 out of 10 teenagers who use the Internet have a social networking profile. But digging deeper into the statistics he reveals a more interesting fact.

The teenagers who are the most connected and active in online social networks are also the most socially active offline. In other words, online social networking is not perceived as different. These individuals are "naturally" social and do social things online and offline.

You would have thought that spending ages on Facebook, MySpace and so on, the online social networkers would not have time to spend with their friends offline. But it seems the reverse is true. The more that people network online, the more time they spend with "real" people.

It was fascinating yesterday when I sparked a debate in Ecademy about going for quantity rather than quality in the online contacts you have. Some people were dubious about going for raw numbers. However, my anecdotal evidence is that the more social you are, the more success you have in several areas of life, including business. No, there's no science in this, just a hunch.

But take a look back at Thomas Power's numbers. He has tens of thousands of online contacts. Yet he is one of the busiest offline networkers I know, attending dozens of meetings each month. So is he, like the research suggests, naturally social? Certainly.

The evidence is mounting that online social networking is merely an extension of our natural inclination to want to be with other people, just for the sake of being with other people. Those individuals who see social networking as something different or just for teens are missing out. If you like meeting people offline, you will love it online. And if you like people and you have thousands of online connections, you will like it even more, because you will take the time to meet them, since you are naturally social.

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At April 29, 2008 9:50 AM Anonymous Rob Watson said…

Graham - I think you're missing the word 'be'from your title!

Interesting post though. I've always wondered whether those people with thousands of Ecademy contacts actually get any useful leverage out of it!

 

 

At April 29, 2008 10:06 AM Blogger Graham Jones said…

Hi Rob

Thanks for spotting the typo - now corrected. Amazing how you can re-read something several times and still miss something obvious...!

Kind Regards

Graham

 

 

At April 29, 2008 11:46 AM Anonymous Maria Koletsi said…

Really interesting post. I think it would be a really interesting discussion if we had data frm other countries also. I come from Greece were internet use now it is rising. So, what if we had a crosscultural analysis about social networking and how the culture affects parallel social networking in teenagers?

 

 

At April 29, 2008 12:03 PM Blogger Graham Jones said…

Thanks Maria. Yes I agree, I think this would be interesting as it would help web site owners to slightly adapt their offerings for individual cultural preferences - something they don't really do at the moment.

 

 

At April 29, 2008 2:03 PM Blogger PennyPower said…

Great article, very balanced and I love the information about teenagers, I think it is very true, if social online likely to be social offline. I can confirm Thomas is meeting people offline every day, and I am out at least 3 days meeting. Nothing really replaces building a close friendship face to face but the online does allow you to keep in touch and start relationships going.
Thank you, loved it, infact going to quote you at the Guildford Grow your own Business tomorrow!

 

 

At April 29, 2008 3:09 PM Blogger Graham Jones said…

Thanks for your kind words Penny. I think it's worthwhile reflecting that unique amongst the social networking sites is the mix of online and offline that Ecademy brings. Once all the hype about online social networking dies down and it becomes an "everyday" thing, this mix may well prove to be Ecademy's most significant benefit and is probably why it is a long-term survivor - and will be.

 

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