So – the rules
say back up your statements with valid, verifiable, empirical data, engage in
the process of codifying theories postulated from reproducible experimentation,
and don’t make broad generalizations.
Naturally I’ll probably break most of those rules before my word count
hits 500 words. I will not tell you that
93% of the people who read this will not forward it, nor will I ask if you’re
one of the 7% who will. Those are made
up numbers. They are about as scientifically
reliable as Obama’s economic recovery numbers.
Do you remember
the PEANUTS comic strip in which Lucy is waxing eloquent through a list of ‘little
known scientific facts’? Brother Linus
then asks Lucy how, if the aforementioned data are in fact ‘little known’ did
she happen to come by the information? “I
make it up.” Is her smug reply.
Only about 7%
of the world’s population is even aware that the other 93% is as clueless as a
blind man judging the swim suit competition.
Yeah, I just made that up, but 93% of you will believe it because you
will have read it on the internet, which, as we all know is never wrong, or sat
least only 93% wrong 7% of the time.
Here’s my take
on it.
It’s all about
demographics. I don’t have the empirical
data to show you, but I’m willing to bet Zuckerman and ‘friends’ – friends in
this instance being the deep pockets behind Facebook - spent far more money in
the last twelve months researching demographics than they did in researching
Facebook ‘improvements’. That big
overhaul you woke up to yesterday? (and by the way, the flashing traffic sign –
photoshopped or not – is still the best one so far). Hold on to your booty, boys and girls because
in the words of the guy on late night TV hawking those razor sharp Ginsu ® knives,
“But wait – there’s more.” Facebook news
reports yesterday said that the shock and awe makeover you woke up to was
merely the beginning. There is more to
come. A lot more.
Why, you ask?
“Because”,
Karmac the Magnificent responds. “Because
I can.”
As is the case
with this humble scribe, most of you who will actually read this are NOT
Zuckerman’s demographic. We who know
that ‘you are late’ is not spelled ‘U R L8’ are not the Facebook target
audience. Facebook’s target demographic
(sorry for the redundancy, but MS Office Word 2010 doesn’t list any synonyms
for ‘demographic’ in its thesaurus) is roughly the 17-25 year old age bracket,
with a reading comprehension level of about sixth grade. That’s roughly the span from Junior in high
school to second year Harvard Law. After
that the theory is that we’re too old and set in our ways to keep up with the
more fluid creation Facebook has turned out to be. Whether this is by design or happenstance
doesn’t matter.
Now, since I
have not fallen into that imperial demographic for oh, a couple of weeks or so,
Facebook’s designers and creators really aren’t too concerned about the
prospect that my demographic (old farts)
might move on to greener pastures. My demographic is dropping like flies in a
blizzard while theirs is reproducing like rabbits on Viagra. (can I sling them
mixed metaphors, or can’t I?)
I have been a
Facebook user almost since its inception.
I joined when it really was mostly college kids. It looks nothing today like it did back then. The problem is not the changes but rather the
combination of the frequency of the changes, the scope of the changes, and the
whole apparent mindset of Facebook’s owners.
Yes, it’s their bat and ball. Yes
it’s their park. Yes it’s free to
users. But those things are true of other
internet ventures as well, 97% of whom (there’s that bloody number again) give
the appearance that they are at least pretending to listen to the comments,
considerations and concerns of their user base whether it fits their
demographic or not. On the other hand,
Facebook is an equal opportunity brick wall.
They don’t listen to their demographic either.
So for a while,
at least, I’ll be giving Google+ the lion’s share of my social networking. It has taken me several years to reach my
towering plateau of 377 ‘friends’ so I don’t expect my Google Circles to inflate
overnight. And of course, there is a
learning curve to consider, just as there is with Zuckerman’s newest
experimental design. The difference is
that the only difference between Google+ when I went to bed last night and Google+
when I woke up this morning is that last night joining was by invitation
only. This morning, anyone can get in
the pool and play.
That and I
seriously do not expect Google+ to do the social network equivalent of
migrating you from Windows 98 to Win7 in six month’s time. Yes, I know Windows and Microsnot didn’t do
that. I’m making a feeble analogy to
demonstrate both the complexity and rapidity of the FB changes by comparing
them to the more elongated rollout of Microsnot’s operating system over the
course of the last twelve years.
Facebook’s revisions have been as complex, but compressed into a much
smaller window, as it were. Not to mention
that unless you were buying an entirely new computer, you had some small
measure of input regarding when and how you would make the migration.
Around here, a
bank is running a commercial in which this guy comes down for his morning
cuppa, and is greeted by a woman and two teenaged girls. “Who are you?” the man cautiously asks. “We’re your new family,” is their cheerful
reply. The advert goes on to talk about
your bank changing owners overnight and how when they do that, you’re sort of
stuck with it, like it or move on.
Sort of like
waking up, flipping on your computer, pouring yourself a cuppa, and seeing “Hi! I’m your new Facebook! No, you don’t have any say in the
matter! Ta-Ta!”
93% of us won’t
care.
7% will shrug
their shoulders and walk down the block to the store with the Grand Opening
sign in its window.
And yes, I made
those numbers up, too.
2 comments:
...Sir, I bow to you, this is over the top...Yesterday reading the younger foks status..made me realize they thought we were gold goats....The words, suck it up or get off....were repeated several times. Love this blog, thank you...Mary
At my age I don't think I need some snot nosed kid (OMG - I'm my mother!) telling me what I want. I think I can figure it out on my own, thank you very much. Glad you enjoyed this.
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