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Facebook Launches Classifieds
May 15, 2007 at 5:46 pm · Filed under innovation, social networks
The blogosphere is abuzz with the news that Facebook has moved into classifieds with the launch of Marketplace. Reactions vary from horror “Another nail in the coffin for newspapers!” to complacence.
But how many of these writers are active users of Facebook?
For what it’s worth, I’m a social networking junkie, a newspaper nerd and a journalist – and I think Facebook Marketplace is something that alts should watch very, very carefully.
Overview of Facebook Marketplace
Traditional Classifieds Categories
Facebook Marketplace offers traditional Classifieds sections, geared towards a younger audience: For Sale (Books, Furniture, Tickets, Electronics, Other), Housing and Jobs. As to be expected from the demographics of the site users, ‘Housing’ skews towards rentals and shared rooms – not too many 3 story brownstones for sale.
Cost and accessibility
Registered users can post ads for free, and you cannot peruse the ads unless you are a logged-in, registered member. Facebook is based around local networks – based on a city, workplace, school or region. You can browse other networks, but you cannot post in a network you do not belong to.
Integrated Functionality
Facebook is an extremely well-thought out site, and classifieds ads are accessible in multiple places throughout the site, increasing utility for users.

The homepage of Facebook features a News Feed – a list of updates from all of the friends in your network. Classifieds ads that your friends post show up here, as well as on their profiles. Browsing the Marketplace, you have access to standard FB tools – so you can check out the profile of the seller or email them; send the posting to a pal, or post it to your own profile with a short note (e.g. “Someone ought to buy this futon, it’s wicked cheap!”)
The end result? It’s much easier to stumble across an ad that interests you than on a traditional online source of classifieds such as a newspaper.
Why Facebook Could Eat Market Share
Local & Trusted Network
Over time, the usefulness of Craigslist has diminished, with spammers repeating job posts, and overseas contractors answering ads for local employment. But Facebook carefully restricts who can join the site. At present, it’s impossible to post an ad in multiple networks (although the NYTimes reports this might be a later, paid option) – which means the majority of ad content will be genuine. And although the networks on FB are admittedly limited to your geographic/work/school region, I don’t see this as a disadvantage. As a wired 20-something, I just need one roommate, or one person to buy my car. I would rather do business with someone who I can check out digitally, versus the dealing with the relatively anonymous responses you’d generally get with a traditional ad.
Strict Community Policing and Verification
Facebook has a stringent policy of protecting it’s users from spammers, and ‘fake’ profiles for companies or porn stars are not allowed. A few weeks ago, I was temporarily banned from the site for sending the same message to over 10 users. I’ve since been reinstated, but I learned the hard way – FB takes spamming seriously.
Marketplace ads are no less strictly policed. I spotted a mean “Jane Doe is a Whore”-esque post on Marketplace, and tagged it as ‘Targeting an Individual’. I’d bet money that the poster’s account will be temporarily or permanently disabled. For users who have invested lots of time in building their friends list, uploading pictures, and joining groups, getting banned is a powerful disincentive to abusing the classifieds system.
Ease of Use
Facebook is slick, easy to use, and integrates all of its functionality so seamlessly that it’s comparable to a Mac, with behemoth MySpace as serving as the metaphorical clunky, buggy PC cousin. FB is smart about creating useful peripherals, such as Javascript browser pop-ups that allow you to post a news article to your profile, or iPhoto integration that allows you to upload images from your Mac – so smart, methinks, that their foray into classifieds will no doubt be accompanied by other user tools that make selling and buying easier.
Small Scale Transactions
With few exceptions, classifieds transactions tend to be small scale. It’s my opinion that users will appreciate the ability to conduct these small-scale business deals in a platform they are already spending their time using, versus creating additional accounts or seeking out another classifieds vendor.
What are your thoughts?
Lots of folks disagree with me, and think that FB Marketplace is no big deal. What’s your take on it?
Small communities engage people
March 23, 2007 at 1:41 pm · Filed under Marketing, advertising, community, social networks
MySpace is the behemoth that fragments the attention spans of 18-35 year olds, says conventional wisdom.
But does the megasite really deliver that much value to advertisers?
‘Online community developer’ Communispace’s latest study suggests that smaller, fully transparent, and branded communities attract more engaged users who create content instead of ‘lurking’:
The more intimate the community, the more people participate. [...] 86% of the people who log on to private, facilitated communities with 300 to 500 members made contributions: they posted comments, initiated dialogues, participated in chats, brainstormed ideas, shared photos, and more. Only 14% merely logged in to observe, or “lurk.” [...]
In a typical online forum, for example, just 1% of site visitors contribute, and the other 99% lurk.
- via MediaPost
So what does this mean for alts? By creating small, vibrant local communities of discussion online, alts can attract engaged audiences that marketers are seeking. MySpace hasn’t won.
How to generate traffic using social networks
March 19, 2007 at 1:39 pm · Filed under 2.0, Traffic, social networks
How do you use the engaged, attentive audiences on existing social networks such as YouTube in order to drive traffic to your own content?
Lonelygirl15, a YouTube user, gave us a case study of how to do it. The actress for an alternate reality game garnered a wide following on YouTube by following these simple steps:
1. lonelygirl15 began began ‘friending’ other youtube users (creating “her” own social network.)
2. lonelygirl15 next began to seek out popular videos and began commenting on them with regularity (creating name-recognition among an even broader audience of those who are viewing these popular videos.
3. lonelygirl15 began posting her own videos and her friends began posting responses and the masses who view popular videos linked through to her after reading her previous comments…the rest is history….huge traffic and a loyal fan-base.
- Marc Levin, Senior Marketing Manager, Yahoo! Publisher Network Group, reporting on SXSWi session LonelyGirl15 on his blog dogballs
So how can alt papers put LonelyGirl15 strategies to work for them?
1. Create online presences with authentic voices.
2. Use your online presences (MySpace, YouTube, and Flickr) to interact regularly and meaningfully with real people. Post comments on their pages and content.
3. Link to your content contextually on other people’s sites. Posted a comment about politics? Send them a targeted link to a recent story.
[More about the LonelyGirl15 phenomenon.]
How does your paper drive traffic using social networks?


