By - Mark Sullivan
Now that Facebook has gone public and is nearing an astounding 1 billion members, it’s a good time to ask whether Facebook’s main rival, Google, can compete in the social networking game.
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| Facebook Application |
Google said in April that 170 million users had “upgraded to
Google+,” but the company has been coy when it comes to specifying how
many of those people actually use the social network on a regular basis.
Some observers have suggested that it's mainly Google employees and
hard-core Google loyalists who actively use the service today.
I still think Google+ can win out against Facebook in the end. But to
do that, Google must learn how to play to its own strengths.
A lot rides on whether Google can pull that off. For ad targeting,
Google can collect the data it needs from the subjects of people’s Web
searches and the content of email, but that data isn’t nearly as
personal and valuable as the stuff people willingly provide to Facebook
every day. Social network data is far more individual and
preference-oriented than other kinds of targeting data, and the
long-term competitiveness of Google’s advertising business (96.5 percent
of its revenue) may depend on Google's ability to get that data.
If anybody has a battle plan for Google+, it’s Larry Page. The Google
cofounder and CEO has given some good reasons why Google+ will become a
contender, but his reasons seem highly theoretical at this point.
Page says that the “Circles” structure in Google+ offers a great way to
organize your friendships. He’s right: The Circles design is immediately
intuitive; it’s easily understandable, and it works because it
replicates the way we manage relationships in real life.
Mark Zuckerberg stresses that you can make “groups” in Facebook to
organize friends in the same way. But that functionality was not part of
Facebook's original design; the service bolted it on later. And that’s
why grouping your friends in Facebook is a far clunkier process than it
is in Google+. The Circles concept is central to Google+--in fact,
Google+ was originally called “Google Circles.”
Category - Facebook Application
Source - http://www.pcworld.com/article/257261/why_google_can_still_beat_facebook.html
Source - http://www.pcworld.com/article/257261/why_google_can_still_beat_facebook.html

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