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Content-centric Communities

Bernard Lunn, at Read/WriteWeb wrote an interesting article about the failure of Eons.

Eons is a social networking website aimed at the over-fifty crowd, headed by the founder of job-site Monster.com. After raising $32M, Eons is now cutting it’s workforce in half – not exactly a measure of success.

In his article, Lunn touches a point I’ve been making for a long time: people gather around content, not around demographic variables (see “The Advertiser’s Dilemma”, “Rethinking Ratings” and “Why Google Should Buy YouTube” for my previous articles on content-centric ratings analysis).

Lunn think the problem lies in Eons’ strategy to connect people around age, a traditional demographic variable, and not around content or common interests. He’s hit the nail squarely on the head:

“…people want to connect around content, not around age. Connecting around content is what Blogs do. You connect on something that interests you. (…) As you get older, you get a more varied set of interests and human relationships across all ages.”

Age/Sex/Location is not a social network

Demographic variables allow advertisers and their clients to easily target their products to artificial segments of the population that probably have very little else in common, other than age/sex/location. In a small-town-world these variables may have been good enough to create desirable advertising targets, but we now live in a connected world where people of all ages and genders interact and share common interests on a scale seldom seen before.

And while you can still use demographic variables to target your product, you’d be missing a much more interesting target, one capable of creating die-hard fans and viral awareness of your product, by ignoring content-centric connections.

As for social networks, look at the successful ones and the “glue” that keeps them together:

Building a social network around content will not magically make it successful, just like putting wings on a box won’t make it fly; but those wings sure help once you put the rest of the airplane together.

The Content-centric Connectivity Chart

The following chart is an example of how people of different ages, genders and cultural backgrounds gather around common interests (caveat: networks are not drawn to scale, connections do not attempt to imply actual traffic for these sites, and age/gender/race were limited by the avatar icons I could find on the net).

Content-Centric communities chart

The Content-centric Connectivity chart highlights two key ideas:

  • Successful networks are built around content, not around demographics.
  • There’s a huge opportunity for anyone who learns how to target their products around content-centric communities.

Conclusion

There will always be products that need to be targeted around demographic variables (e.g., feminine products, some toys, acne-medication, denture products), but the opportunities and tools for expanding your product’s appeal have never been this good.

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12 Comments

  1. Thanks for mentioning Dogster and Catster. That’s a great social network map you have – love the icons. I think your point is well-made. Our community has some demographic groupings, but for the most part is really diverse, but our members keep coming back for the content and the shared connection about their pets. We just reached 500,000 members last week!

    Woofs and Meows
    Patty

  2. Thanks for mentioning Dogster and Catster. That’s a great social network map you have – love the icons. I think your point is well-made. Our community has some demographic groupings, but for the most part is really diverse, but our members keep coming back for the content and the shared connection about their pets. We just reached 500,000 members last week!

    Woofs and Meows
    Patty

  3. Thanks Patty. The icons were made by FastIcon.com – they have a collection of very nice free and for-sale icons.

    Although I’m not a member of Dogster (no pets), I think it’s the perfect example of a content-centric community: people from all walks of life brought together by the simple fact that they own pets.

    How do you sell your community to advertisers? What kind of demographic information do they request from you? I see that not all your ads are pet-related…

  4. Thanks Patty. The icons were made by FastIcon.com – they have a collection of very nice free and for-sale icons.

    Although I’m not a member of Dogster (no pets), I think it’s the perfect example of a content-centric community: people from all walks of life brought together by the simple fact that they own pets.

    How do you sell your community to advertisers? What kind of demographic information do they request from you? I see that not all your ads are pet-related…

  5. Hey there, thanks for such an informative post on this one, i was certainly not aware of these communities!

    Thanks,
    Jessica

  6. Hey there, thanks for such an informative post on this one, i was certainly not aware of these communities!

    Thanks,
    Jessica

  7. Hey there, thanks for such an informative post on this one, i was certainly not aware of these communities!

    Thanks,
    Jessica

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