Teens turn from Facebook to fresher social-media sites – USATODAY.com
★ Summary
- Prob: teens' attention, and they're drifting to other social-media sites as
evidence mounts that the growth of the world's largest social network is
slowing.
- reasons
1. 18% of teens prefer to "check in" on Foursquare instead of Facebook, and 10% say Pinterest is a better site for browsing.
2. teens are divvying up their digital presence. It assures them more privacy, as well as new popularity among a smaller audience.
★ Thinking.(It's not my opinion, just agree opinion)
I think that this article has a few key points missing. First, Facebook
has a stronghold on being a hub for social interactive, for the most
part facebook is the genesis of your social identity and it serves as a
platform for people to evolve, gamify and build. Instagram is not a
direct competitor. Instagram plugs in to Facebook, twitter, tumblr and
foursquare. It is very much a competition site, it has simplified
picture taking to level a playing field of displaying your life story.
Most teenagers that are social media savvy have grown a deep affinity
for tumblr. College age - thirties, urban networks(cities) and
tech/marketing people love twitter (my guess, the population density of
your network serves a good basis for crowd sourcing information), and G+
and pinterest have their base group because of the nature of the
machine. If you are a tech savvy team then you can make sense of
streaming content and collecting galleries of visual dopeness without
order, no one has to explain it and any question you have, you consult
google. Adults have lost creativity and dont have the same mental
training and capacity to consume this in the same way. So they created
pinterest to organize it, and yet many people still could not
understand. I say all this to say this. Facebook is the hub, it is the
homebase for social but as your social needs grow and adapt to different
learning styles, you embrace new technology and find your niche.
- by Osahon Tongo
★ Source
http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/tech/news/story/2012-06-20/facebook-teens/55723500/1
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