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      25 Jul 2011

      Forget your social start up - Twitter and Facebook have got it sewn up

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      via wallblog.co.uk

      So says Silicon Valley guru Roger McNamee of Elevation Partners, who was one of the first investors in Facebook. The theory is that the twin pillars of social are now so strong that it is almost impossible for anyone to come up with a start up to challenge them. So all those social start ups are a waste of time and won't be getting any of Roger McName's cash.

      I think this is an over-generalisation, but it is something that I have been thinking for several months now. It seems the only way for a social start up to make any money is simply by being bought by Facebook. Take location-based services. FourSquare had a big head start and loads of media coverage, but Facebook Places seems to have taken the wind out of its sails (in the UK at least).

      Also Twitter and Facebook are so ingrained in our lives now that they won't be disappearing in a MySpace/Friends Reunited style.

      The gaping flaw with McNamee's theory is that he has a downer on Google. It is early days for Google+, but it clearly has the potential to develop into a mainstream social platform.

      Besides, if you passionately disagree with him, it is worth noting that he doesn't always get it right. As WallBlog reports

      'Worth noting that McNamee is also a former Palm investor and once said of the Palm Pre: “You know the beautiful thing: June 29, 2009, is the two-year anniversary of the first shipment of the iPhone. Not one of those people will still be using an iPhone a month later.”

      http://wallblog.co.uk/2011/07/25/social-is-over-says-top-silicon-valley-inves...

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      9 Jul 2009

      Our survey says - Twitter users more interested in sex and coffee than Facebook devotees

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      via adage.com

      There's a great feature on Ad Age http://adage.com/digital/article?article_id=137792 about what your favourite social network says about you. It features the results of a survey by Anderson Analytics and is designed to help brands identify users' surfing habits and interests.

      Lots of the stuff we know - people spend a lot of time on their chosen site, nearly 10% stay logged in all day long etc, but there's some other really interesting stuff, mainly about brands.

      "When asked if seeing a brand on a social network makes them feel positive or negative about that brand, an almost-equal 17% said positive and 19% said negative. The other 64% were neutral or didn't care. When asked if they would like more communications from brands, 45% were neutral, while 20% said yes and 35% said no."

      Which kind of fits what I thought in that the vast majority of SN users don't care too much about brands on SNs. They will interact with them though if the concept and the application grabs their attention.

      The stuff about Twitter users is priceless. Apparently if you use Twitter you drink loads of coffee, are entrepreneurial (no surprise there as the vast majority of early Twitter users were from the start up community) and are interested in news and new things. Best of all you are more likely to interested in sex than the average Facebook user - aah so that's what all those Tweet-Ups are about.

      Anyway check it out - it's an interesting read.

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