Social Behavior: Following, Friending, and the Establishment of Credible and Trusted Sources
Social Behavior: Following, Friending, and the Establishment of Credible and Trusted Sources
How following and tracking social behavior allow for more trusted sources to emerge
I was playing around with social network icons the other day, pairing ones that I liked to form word phrases. The one I liked best was the Hype Machine´s
heart (for when you heart a song) and Tumblrr´s follow (the plus sign
followed by the word "follow"). Combined they become "follow your
heart."


When I first started social bookmarking on Delicious I realized that if
you subscribed to someone´s feed you could in some ways follow their
train of thought - viewing their fluctuating interest levels through
what they were viewing and reading over time.
Users can build a loyal set of followers by establishing themselves as
a credible and trusted source of information. These "alpha users" have
strong, well-established profiles on various social networking
platforms, micro-blogging, and bookmarking sites, with loyal followers
that subscribe to their feeds across these outlets.
These followings create networks that are not based on inviting, but
more so a reciprocal relationship between the user and the follower,
based on the user being a trusted source and innovator either online or
off and establishing themselves as someone others are interested in.
Online one's innovator status can be exhibited through their social
network behaviors; what they are bookmarking, how it is being tagged,
how early they identify new information, sites, and trends. With
tags, one's skills are further refined, and in the case of Delicious,
the more thorough a user is at parsing the single most relevant line in
a story, the more quickly that user can evolve into a trusted source
and establish themselves as someone other users look to for the latest
news and innovations.
This following process has enabled a natural selection-like structure
of networked intelligence to emerge that is vastly different from the
friending process of social networks and the associated social
relevancy and importance of users with high friend counts. It is
amazing how much one can see and learn by following the social networks
and the related web-tools utilized by their peers.
A good way for users to gain credibility and increase awareness of
their existence would be for these social networks to free up more
meta-data around the behavior of users. This would allow for
qualification and rankings around which users might be deemed worthy of
following. For example, if I want to follow the top ten users who were
the first to identify and properly tag a certain trend or topic, I
should be able to easily access that information through one aggregate
feed or application.
Unfortunately, at the present moment each bookmarking, micro-blogging,
and social networking site has its own ranking and tagging system,
making it nearly impossible for someone to easily migrate their tags or
networks (of followers or alpha users - the users they are following)
from one site to another.
This is a difficult process as each social network has completely different tools and associated metrics. For example:
- On Flickr, my contacts are those that I follow and their
image-specific skills (how good of a photographer they are) is what
determines my following, and I have ascribed a level of trust to their
image feeds on Tumblr as well.
- On Twitter, much like Delicious there is a natural selection of
signal to noise that determines the follow. The more signal, the better
the follow. The more noise, the less likely I am to follow
- Each of these follows have their own hierarchy of adoption. In my
experience the hardest follow is Delicious, followed by Twitter, then
Flickr, than Tumblr, I could go on.
- Delicious is the hardest because it has taken me over two years and 11,000 +
bookmarks to amass 200 people in my network/follows to my daily
bookmarking. Over the same period at Flickr, where I have published
2,620 photos and received 173,115 views, I have 417 people that call me
a contact or follow my photos.
As we have been building out social features around Trendrr, I am
pleased that we will be generating cool exportable data and tags around
social behavior and impressions that have not been generated before;
essentially allowing new aggregate values to emerge so actionable
intelligence can be properly followed.
I am excited to be following, followed, and creating new tools in this
exciting space. We are just on the tip of understanding the importance
of this movement and I look forward to following the progress and
development of these new metrics and associated values.