Sunday, February 19, 2012
Beyond Facebook: The Rise Of Interest-Based Social Networks

Editor’s Note: This guest post is written by Jay Jamison, a Partner at BlueRun Ventures, who focuses on early stage mobile, consumer and enterprise investments. He also serves on the boards of AppCentral, AppRedeem, Foodspotting, and Thumb. You can follow Jay on Twitter @jay_jamison or read his blog at www.jayjamison.com.
With the pending public offering of Facebook anticipated to be the largest tech IPO in history, it’s an interesting time to think about where we go from here. Some say “social is done,”  Facebook is all the social media anyone would ever want or need.  Unquestionably, as it nears one billion accounts, in the solar system of  social media, Facebook is the Sun — the gravitational center around  which everything social revolves.
But while some may pronounce that Facebook is all the social we’d  ever need, users clearly haven’t gotten the memo. Instead, users are  rapidly adopting new interest-based social networks such as Pinterest, Instagram, Thumb, Foodspotting, and even the very new Fitocracy. (Disclosure: BlueRun Ventures is an investor in Thumb and Foodspotting.)
The numbers tell the tale around users’ appetites for these new  interest-based social networks. Pinterest, the increasingly popular  virtual pinboard, crossed 10M monthly unique users in the US in January  2012, achieving 8 digits worth of monthly uniques faster than any site  ever, comScore says. According to Silicon Valley uber-investor Ron Conway, Pinterest is growing like Facebook 5 years ago.
On Thumb, a community for instant opinions, user engagement has  mushroomed in its short history. Users asking questions can expect to  receive over 60 answers from other users within 5 minutes. As a result  of this near instantaneous community engagement, Thumb’s average usage  is currently second only to Facebook’s, and is far ahead of mainstream  services including Pinterest and Tumblr, though on a smaller base.
What accounts for the fast growth of these interest-based social networks, and what does it mean for Facebook’s future?
Interest-based social networks have a markedly different focus and  approach than Facebook. The Pinterest, Thumb and Foodspottings of the  world enable users to focus and organize around their interests first,  whereas Facebook focuses on a user’s personal relationships. Facebook  offers us a social utility to deepen social connectivity with our  existing social graphs, while these new interest-based social networks  enable users to express their interests in new, engaging ways and offer  authentic, high value connectivity with new people we don’t already  know. The different approaches of these interest-based services are  distinct from Facebook, and they are powering the massive growth and  engagement we are seeing in these new services.
On Pinterest, I can curate and express my interests in Crossfit,  cars and architecture, giving me the ability to create a strongly  personal identity that draws me into new social relationships with  people on the basis of my interests. Similarly on Foodspotting, I can  easily express my love for ramen, which in turn connects me with other ramen fans who aren’t in my current social graph.
So if interest-based social networks focus first on an individual’s  interest graph and Facebook centers on an individual’s social graph,  which service will be the winner?
Both.
Humans are inherently social creatures, and we define ourselves both  by the people we know and our interests. We make decisions about where  to eat, what to buy, where to visit, etc. based on a complex matrix of  social relationships, past experiences, location, long standing  interests and future goals. Today’s platforms approach our lives from  different angles but both are integral to how we define ourselves and  interact with the world around us.
There are opportunities to establish differentiated, sustainable  social media brands with large, passionate audiences. Much like the  modern day media disrupters (e.g. ESPN or HBO or CNN), these services  can establish new social media networks that are differentiated and  unique, protecting them from the inevitable concern that they get  squashed by Facebook. The traditional “Big 3 networks” (NBC, ABC, and  CBS) used to be the only properties that really mattered, similar to how  some view Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn in today’s social media  landscape. Emerging networks will be the new media brands and properties  that augment social networking and media.
At the same time, the rise of these new interest based social  networks does not really threaten Facebook, in fact, they are more  likely to benefit Facebook. Specifically, Facebook has evolved itself  brilliantly into not only an end user application drawing near to 1  billion accounts but also a robust, powerful platform other apps can  leverage in order to drive more users to their services. Pinterest,  Instagram, Fab, and many others have adopted Facebook’s Timeline API for  precisely the reason of wanting to raise awareness of their services  and drive more users to their sites. As these new services grow, more  content gets pumped back to Facebook, Facebook’s platform gets more  robust. Wash, rinse, repeat… Facebook’s positive feedback loop gains  more momentum, and becomes more powerful.
In the words of Marc Andreessen, “Software is eating the world”, and  in the world of social media, there is, for now, plenty of world to go  around.
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