Hacking the nature of existence
Nic Brisbourne concludes a thoughtful post "On widgets, social networks and the nature of existence": "[W]e find ourselves in a situation where internet companies might not even need their own website. A kind of virtual, virtual company if you will…."
I completely agree with Nic's sentiment at a high level. This concept of a virtualised service was what lead i-together to deploy Blog Friends within Facebook in the first place. However, the tactical view from within an early-stage startup like Blog Friends turns out to look subtly different than I expected. I left a comment on Nic's post:
Your "web brand virtualisation via open social nets" point is well taken. As you say, Blog Friends within Facebook is an example of this trend.
However, we are now building a central presence for Blog Friends beyond 3rd-party sites. To start with, we plan to deploy some key new Blog Friends features exclusively at i-together.com, over the next month or so, keeping the main feedreader service within Facebook. Then we intend to comprehensively re-architect Blog Friends around a set of APIs, which will make it relatively trivial to deploy (or for others to deploy) Blog Friends on diverse platforms and devices. (Incidentally, we didn't start off with an API-based approach back in June 2007 because we knew we had to get Blog Friends out as soon as possible to catch the Facebook adoption wave—a decision we still regard as correct.)
But why do we not feel that spreading across multiple social nets alone is an optimum strategy?
Two reasons: firstly, having our own "place" on the web gives us an air of solid independence; it safeguards us against the varying fortunes of any given 3rd-party platform (witness Facebook's fall from grace amongst the In Crowd of late). Secondly, it is *so* much quicker to implement and test features when e.g. FBML and FBJS are not involved, and those features can be a lot richer and run much faster. With our tiny development resources (three of us!), and with competition breathing down our neck, we can't afford to waste even an ounce of effort.
Presence distribution is immensely valuable as a strategy, but the current state of the web and the tech that powers it, along with startup resource limitations can necessitate some toughly pragmatic tactical choices.
Labels: blog friends, social media, social networks, virtualisation, web, widgets


5 Comments:
Interesting post, Luke. Virtualisation seems to be a theme throughout the industry. Just look at the popularity of Amazon's computing/hosting services.
The issue that concerns me is how you create and develop a brand offering that lives outside a single service. If you're always reliant on FB and the other social nets, then you're always at their whim. And then there's the issue of who owns what.
Your strategy sounds like a good one to me, good luck with the development, looking forward to the new stuff!
Thanks, Sam. Quite agree with your points.
Good luck with everything, Luke. I'm really going to miss Blogfriends as I found it an incredibly good way to find interesting content for my own blog and made some new blogger friends along the way. I do hope it comes back, and was also thinking about how nice it would be to have a widget on my blog which did something similar ...
If you need to betatest anything later on, do rope me in.
Thanks, Sharon—you were one of our most loyal users, for which we are so grateful. If you are on twitter, please email me and I will invite you to the buzzspotr.com pre-alpha.
Thank you very much for the great information.
Thanks
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