When I used Facebook, I realized that there is a great deal of hype about
the business value of social networking. A lot of that hype is focused on by
those who are trying to make money from it. One of the supposed benefits of social networking is that it can raise your
visibility. If you’re more visible (among the
right people), you can attract more business. That part is all good.
But not all of the ways to gain visibility are the same. If you use Facebook to raise your
visibility, it comes with a risk. I have learned that as you raise your visibility, you also
increase your accessibility. If
you have a Facebook page with a wall on it, then people can post comments on
your wall. If you have a fan page, someone can “like” your fan page, post spam on your wall, and then “unlike” your fan page, and it is impossible to ban them from
repeated abuse. You would just have to deal with it. The
more visible you are on Facebook, the more people have access to interact with
you in some way, whether it’s by sending you private messages, posting messages
on your wall, or inviting you to events and groups. Beyond a certain point,
this kind of contact becomes impractical to deal with in any meaningful way.
I like that Facebook may
have helped to increase my visibility by introducing me to people I may have never met or have gotten the chance to get to know better with it, but I am glad I deactivated it for my immersion project. When I dropped Facebook, I breathed a major sigh of relief.
In a way I’m still sighing, days later. It really is a great relief not to be
so accessible anymore. The visibility gains that Facebook
provides just aren’t worth the price. There are much easier and more effective
ways to build visibility that don’t go along with such risks.
Monday, March 19, 2012
Sunday, March 18, 2012
cheater, cheater...
Well guys, I have a confession. I cheated today! :( Shocking, huh? I was disappointed in myself, but I did learn something out of it, though. Social networking makes it easy to become
socially lazy. With a few clicks, you can lead yourself into thinking you
have an active social life. It’s a good idea to
pause and take a look at your social results. I found that spending more time on Facebook, especially by cheating today by using it for the first time since the end of February, did not produce
much value for me socially. I did make some interesting contacts now and then,
but it was not worth the time spent. It is true that in-person networking is more challenging. If
your social skills are weak, you can pretend to be a social butterfly online
just by throwing a lot of time at it. You’re still going to be limited in
the long run by your ability to connect with people face to face. Make sure you
don’t let your social skills get to the point where you end up spending
more and more time alone, vainly trying to feed the illusion that you have a
real social life. Since I have cheated, I have to make sure to keep challenging myself to not give up on this immersion. If I only
do what’s easy, I will grow weaker with each passing day that is left.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Facebook = ADDICTION
This is probably obvious to most of you, but the
Facebook “friends” that I interacted with the most were the ones who tended to be
the most addicted. They posted more status updates and comments
because they spent a lot of time on the social networking site. That is what I would always do, too. So I ended up giving the most
attention to those who are the greatest addicts.
I realized that I ended up
spending the most time interacting with the people who were the worst influences
— highly unproductive people who don’t value their time. This had many effects, such as causing me to become more addicted to the site and
to feel the urge to post more often just for the sake of posting.
The closer I became with those people, the more I got
sucked into spending more time on the site. After I deactivated my Facebook, I asked myself, Should
I really be giving so much attention to a social networking site?
When I dropped Facebook, I also dropped
off the radar of some of, what I always called, my biggest fans on Facebook. I am no longer
subject to their influence, which was probably stronger than I would care to admit.
Breaking free of this cycle was a wise choice. I should have done it sooner.
A Friend Isn't Necessarily a "Friend"
I can be friendly with people from all
walks of life, but when it comes to which people are most compatible as my
long-term friends, some of my friends on Facebook are not a good fit for the kinds of lasting
friendships that I wish to obtain. The main issue is the age difference. Some of my
Facebook friends are like twice my age because they are my mom's friends. They simply don’t have the
life experience that I do to give the kind of value I gain from a good friendship. I like having friends my age, or at least near my age. They help me stay young at heart,
and they help me keep my thinking from becoming stale. When I dropped Facebook, my
social life began to rebalance itself automatically. For a few years now, this has been a challenging part of my life
to balance. It took a while to recognize and accept that my online “friends”
and my best in-person friends are very different people. Most
of my Facebook “friends” wouldn’t have been very compatible as in-person
friends. We wouldn’t have had enough in common to develop a particularly deep
friendship. So it seems
odd to refer to them as friends in the same way I’d refer to my in-person
friends. I’ve
learned the hard way that I can’t just fill up my social bucket with an endless
supply of friends and expect good results, even if they’re very
intelligent and all those positive characteristics. So that’s a specific reason Facebook really had to
go — using Facebook was a lame attempt on my part to expect that my in-person friends and Facebook friends would/could be the same people.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
It's All About Computer Interaction
So I'm sitting here going through withdrawals from my Facebook. But then I begin to realize the reality of using Facebook is that I am just typing and viewing insignificant bits of information on a digital
device (computer, cell phone, etc). The next time you use such a service,
pause for a moment and do a reality check. You should ask yourself these questions. What are you actually doing? Who is
with you? How is this advancing your life? What if you do this for twenty more
years? What do you expect to gain from it? You can call it social networking, but
it is not really a social experience if you are actually alone sitting at a
computer. I consider real socialization to be face to face. I feel that there is a tremendous richness to
in-person socialization that just does not translate over the Internet, at least
not yet. A
***hug*** isn’t a real hug. A smiley isn’t a real smile. All you are doing is
pushing buttons. I will go so far as to say that Facebook is not social
networking, but anti-social retreating. If you want to disagree with me about
this, you will have say it to my face. If you try to tell me off by typing
something on a digital device, you are only proving me right. Evil, I know. :) I apologize for this post being more of a rant, but I just could not help myself from this. I am irritated with having no Facebook right now. I hope everyone else's immersions are going great!
Monday, March 12, 2012
Facebook is False... Say What?
I am a very extroverted person, for those of you who do not know or cannot tell. As a child, I was somewhat
introverted, though. In kindergarten, I was the girl who played in the sandbox all by
herself. I do not think I was lonely just because I did that. I just found sand toys more interesting
than people back then. As I got older, I gradually became more of an extrovert. I believe that this was partly by choice.
I pushed myself to develop my social skills and to embrace what I once avoided.
It is said that "you’re an
introvert if you recharge your batteries while being alone, and you’re an
extrovert if you recharge in the company of others." That metaphor does not seem
to work for me, though. I prefer balance, usually by taking turns. If I spend a
lot of time alone, I feel a strong desire to go out and be social. But after a
very social week with it being spring break, which was an absolute blast, I feel the desire to retreat back to my dorm room and enjoy more
solitary time. Being
active on Facebook had the effect of filling my social bucket. Essentially it is a false fill to me, like drinking salt water instead of fresh water.
Instead of providing a real sense of connection that satisfies, it made me
think I was out there being social, but I really was not.
Facebook activity could never recharge my batteries in the way that face to
face interaction does. When I dropped Facebook, I began feeling genuinely more
social when I would go out and do things with my friends. When I WAS active on Facebook, I would not
do that as much because I had the false sense that I was being social by
interacting with my online friends.
Friday, March 2, 2012
Is Each Person Really a Unique Individual?
Facebook
compacts so much communication into a single stream, and this can have a
depersonalizing effect. When I would post something on a friend’s wall, I wasn’t
just communicating with that friend. I was communicating with their posse, too.
If I used the private messaging feature, it was just one message among dozens.
Friends were becoming interchangeable. One thing that surprised me
was just how few of my Facebook friends I actually missed when I deactivated my account. It was difficult to think of my old Facebook friends as individuals.
They were all just part of the collective whole. When I moved away from the
collective, it wasn’t like I had lost any individual friends. Dropping
Facebook wasn’t at all like disconnecting from hundreds of individual friends.
I didn’t miss anyone in particular because my Facebook experience was like
connecting with a collective. I noticed the absence of the collective when I
left, but I didn’t miss it per se. The exception is that if I knew specific
Facebook friends from real life, meaning that we’d met in person and had at
least one good conversation together, then I could still see them as individuals.
But I don’t need Facebook to stay in touch with those people anyway, so I
didn’t feel like I was losing any of these connections by dropping Facebook. I
realize this might sound rather strange, but it’s the best I can explain it. My
Facebook page was very busy with wall posts and such activities of those sort. The feeling that I was interacting with a collective began to feel
rather creepy, as you might imagine. I’m glad to be off of Facebook, since I
really don’t wish to be assimilated. It’s nice not to feel like there’s an
endless stream of other people’s thoughts flowing through my mind all the time.
I can hear my own thoughts once again, and they’re a lot more relaxed.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)