Social networking and the change of interactions
7 July 2010
As published on Business Insider
Google is preparing another attempt to crack the social networking world owned by Facebook, and to a lesser extent, Twitter. Why is Google traveling down this path once again? Aren’t the failures of Dodgeball, Orkut, Jaiku, Buzz, Wave, etc. enough for Google to realize that it just doesn’t understand social networking? Maybe, but Google can’t afford to watch the web become social without it. As Google researcher Paul Adams explains in a huge deck of slides getting passed around on the web, people buying things are more inclined to trust their friends than strangers – or search ads.
Do you think Facebook or Google is more trustworthy if you’re thinking about buying the new Prince CD? What about a new toaster? Or a new golf club? Today, it’s probably Google, but soon enough you could be asking Facebook friends what to buy. It’s this threat that should (and probably does) scare the pants off Google’s executives.
Adams revealed some of these threats in his presentation – a great read in the context of him presenting these results to Google execs who are plotting “Google Me.” A couple things to keep in mind: This presentation isn’t new. And it’s not necessarily indicative of how Google feels. The company has hundreds of researchers. Still, we think this is instructive for people wondering why Google wants to get in the social network business.
Click here to see how social networking is changing the web, and could affect Google



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