miércoles, 25 de enero de 2012

Facebook Timeline-ageddon: Why Now?

Facebook's steady march to global Timeline coverage just turned into a dash — and it's really the users who are running.

By making Facebook Timelines the new de facto standard for all Facebook profiles, in effect, the company just held up a starter pistol and yelled "Go! You have seven days to reach the finish line before we completely change the track!"

That's right, everyone has just one week to get their social media houses in order before Facebook moves the furniture (something we'd heard Facebook did not want to do).

Now, you may get slightly more than seven days. Even though Facebook is no longer offering a choice, the countdown clock to Timline-ification doesn't start until the "activate" button appears atop your profile page.

Once it does, you have just one week to prepare. Facebook (and Mashable) can give you lots of advice about how to hide those embarrassing posts from your virtual biography.

That's not what this column is about. I'm more concerned with why Facebook suddenly decided a mad dash to rollout completion made more sense than ambling along with occasional conversions.

Is Facebook just super-confident about the global reception to its profile makeover? Millions must have already converted, either by forcing the change through publicly available development tweaks last fall or by clicking the button this winter.

I don't think that's why, though. I've met a lot of people who like—even love—timeline, but also almost an equal number who are confused or appalled by it. In my own home, my son likes it, but my wife and daughter hate it.

Some folks I've spoken to said that, given the chance, they would never switch. Others told me they simply abandoned Facebook and set up camp on Google+.

Facebook must know that putting a ticking clock in front of users is bound to make very few of them happy, yet here it is, stop watch in hand. Here's my theory.

The rather confusing Timeline apps environment isn't very effective without it. Facebook made a decent sized splash last week with the introduction of 60 new app partners.

Facebook apps and games are not new. Neither are apps in Timeline (Foursquare already got there). But conducting most of your day-to-day activities, like watching movies, sharing content, reading news, eating out, and more — that's a new wrinkle.

None of this has quite the same impact without Timeline. During last week's event, Facebook made it clear that these apps and your activities around them would live on the Timeline. They'd be summarized in a special section of it.

For these Apps' activities to show up in your timeline, you need only install and allow them once. Then they and the gestures they generate become a part of the fabric of your Timeline—a piece of your growing biography.

I can see it now: "Poor, Charles, I'll miss him. Remember when he used to tell jokes? Remember when he would take us all out to dinner? Where was that? Oh, wait, here it is on his Timeline. And there's the music he was listening to right before he …"

The real reason Facebook is pressing so hard on Timeline now is that it really needs to prove to app partners like Slacker, Payvment, TripAdvisor, TicketFly, Wall Street Journal, Airbnb, and others that this is a real platform. They have to prove the ecosystem has just as much relevance as, say, Android, Windows or Apple's iOS.

Facebook execs, who may be noticing slowed growth in the U.S., realize the time to strike is now. Google is raising the stakes in the platform space, consolidating services and boxing out Facebook and Twitter.

If Facebook does not pull its users in closer and make sure they spend as much time as possible on Facebook, sharing everything they do, those users could share everything elsewhere.

And those of you who are not ready to make the switch to Facebook Timeline? Sorry. You are casualties of a social networking platform and ecosystem war, one that will likely continue for the rest of this decade.

All that's now guaranteed about our social networking experiences is battle after battle, and change after change.

Do you agree, or do you think there are other reasons for the hurry up to Facebook Timeline? Let me know in the comments.


Bonus: How to Fill in Your Facebook Timeline


No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario