Why do you do the social tango?
Tuesday, October 7th, 2008The conversation of why social networks work has come up time and time again in all of the circles of people that I talk to. My tech friends try to explain why Twitter, Plurk or Brightkite are the best networks in town. My old college buddies explain that Facebook or Myspace are by far the greatest tool to catch up with friends. And finally, my business associates swear by LinkedIn to help connect them to the people that they need to reach. While we don’t always agree on everything — One thing is certain, everyone seems to love the social networks. But why?
Could it be that we are just social creatures by nature? Even the gamers (who sit in their bedrooms and wear their gigantic headphones all day) want to socialize; albeit in the online world. Maybe it’s that we love to connect with old friends and hear what they have to say, where they’ve been and what they’ve been up to. I believe is a much simpler reason. Ego.
Ego seems to drive most of what we do in our daily lives. Whether we like to admit it, ego is why most women doll up in the morning before running out to CVS or school. It’s why guys want a big, fancy, expensive car to drive around town. I believe it’s even why we all flock to social networks. We, as a general public, enjoy being in the spotlight and online social networks have made it simpler than ever to get our 15 seconds of fame.
As far as why I believe this is the single most important reason why social networks are working, I give you my theory/self-example. I could go ahead and email, text or IM a bunch of my friends to let them know that my birthday is coming up and we’re going out to the bar. I don’t because I want others to know that we’re going out. I may not even be inviting other people to come to my private event but I want them to know it’s happening. As far as networking sites like Twitter are concerned, I send links to information there instead of emailing it to the people who are interested so that I can show everyone (that follows me) that I got that information before someone else. In addition, I continuously try to grow my network on LinkedIn not only because I like to have a large network of contacts but also because the higher the number of connections, the more popular I look to others. All of these things benefit no one else except for me and my overly inflated ego. We all do it.
Now, I’m not saying that there is anything wrong with it. Just simply pointing out an observation that I’ve made over the past couple of years. What do you think? Why do your social networks continue to grow? Why do you share information on Twitter instead of IM?