I've been travelling around the country this weekend, visiting relatives, and as I browsed the magazines at Nottingham station on my way back to London today I noticed something strange. A magazine devoted entirely to Facebook. With a few minutes to spare before my train, I picked up the magazine. It offers a "complete guide to social networking" and includes things like a step-by-step guide of setting up a profile and famous Facebookers.
I have to admit to being a little baffled by this magazine. I wasn't quite sure who it was aimed at and why they might buy it. Social networking and online communities are a very different sort of media, they allow you to do old things in new ways and to do completely new things. They also change rapidly. Facebook, for instance, has changed a lot over the last few weeks and changes to security and processes are ongoing.
Print, by it's very nature, is out-of-date when it is published. There is a time-delay between composing a piece and it being in the hands of a reader. Social networks and web 2.0 reduces this time-delay to near-zero. So how, then, could a magazine be a useful source of information and help on a social network like Facebook?
I really am at a loss.
Some more reading
- Which Social Portal Will Be Yours?
- Communities = more than the sum of their social media parts
- Social Ad Networks: Win, Lose, or Draw?
- 10 Family-Friendly Social Networking Sites for You
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