Friday, January 4, 2008
Email Blows Away All Other Social Networks
By Max Kalehoff
In fact, email is so dominant that it's the single open-source backbone of nearly every social network.
Think about it: Most social networks require your email address to sign up. Then they try to upload your email address book in order to communicate with your contacts. I can't think of a social network I belong to that doesn't ask me for my email address every time I log in. In fact, I find myself turning off the default email notifications in most social networks I sign up for!
Now consider the natural, authentic and deeper social connections inherent in email. Steve Hodson, who blogs at WinExtra.com, noted that his email connections "have risen up the ranks of the network over time and as such have more of a trust factor associated with them that you will never find elsewhere."
Actual writing, thoughtful interaction and more manual contact management lead to connections far more significant than superficial layers of distributed pokes and passive status feeds.
And as proof that social-networking dominance just might lie with email, the major Internet media companies have acknowledged plans to turn their email services into social networks. Saul Hansell reported on the New York Times Bits blog that "Yahoo and Google realize they have this information (email address books) and can use it to build their own services that connect people to their contacts."
Joe Kraus, who runs Google's OpenSocial project, conceded "there are opportunities with iGoogle to make it more social. It is much easier to extend an existing habit than to create a brand." Yahoo has been more forthcoming with its "Inbox 2.0." I'm not sure of Microsoft, but it could have a hand at the table with its massive customer base across Hotmail, Exchange and Outlook.
Finally, considering my ongoing bout with Socialnetworkitis, I'm more thankful and bullish on email than ever before. I believe online social networks have a big future, and they're a critical part of my personal
and professional life today. But email still is the most reliable and manageable platform for social interaction. It is my default.
In the future, I hope the benefits of the latest wave of social networks will begin to merge seamlessly with the simplicity, compatibility and utility of email. That includes integrated profiling, information feeds, socialnetwork
analysis, privacy and controls. Of course, the big hurdle will be the ongoing fight against spam. Spammers may validate significance, but they're also preventing email from becoming a truly great social network.
Max Kalehoff is vice president of marketing for Clickable, a search-marketing solution for small and midsize
businesses. He also writes AttentionMax.com
