One Cent Friends: Another Attempt To Quantify Social Media's Value
from the disconnect-with-fans-plus-reason-to-not-buy dept
We've talked before about services that attempt to measure someone's social media "influence" and the inherent silliness of the concept. Although the numerical values assigned by services like Klout are, at best, weak indicators of a person's actual influence, it's not surprising that people are trying to make it work. The advertising industry has run on flimsy numbers for a long time: newspaper readerships and television ratings are all extrapolated, not directly measured, and advertisers pay rates based on numbers that may or may not be indicative of how much exposure they are really getting. This was an advantageous situation for the media industry, but the digital world has largely nullified that advantage. Today's advertisers are clamouring for social campaigns and viral ads, but ad agencies and publications aren't quite sure how to actually measure those things—or how to charge for them.
So it's interesting, but pretty bizarre, to see some short film creators attempt a promotion that places an arbitrary dollar- penny-value on their fans' Facebook friends:
A 40-minute film called Andy X (about the life of Andy Warhol), which was available for streaming starting Feb. 22, is offering interested viewers an opportunity to get a discount on the $6.99 price tag. As the promotion explains, "We're trying something a little different here. We're letting you pay to watch the movie by using your friends as currency."
In other words, one Facebook friend equals one cent. If you have 300 friends, you'll pay $3.99 for the rental. Don't get too excited if you have more than 400 friends since there is a cap ($2.99 is the least you'll be able to pay to stream the film).
It's a novel idea, but one that I doubt will work for a variety of reasons. For one thing, number of friends is an even worse influence metric than something like Klout, which at least looks at multiple factors. People use Facebook in all kinds of different ways: someone with 100 friends might be a quiet user who uses the site for little more than private messages and birthday wishes, or they might be a powerful voice who keeps a small social circle of others like them. Similarly, someone with 1000 friends might be a trendsetting socialite, or they might be an indiscriminate social media butterfly whose posts are lost in the noisy news feeds of other people who also have 1000 friends each, and who don't really remember who they are.
Moreover, the promotion doesn't actually encourage fans to do anything. Nobody is going to go out and add an extra hundred friends to save a dollar, and those getting the full discount have no added incentive to actually use their supposed influence on behalf of the movie. I bet this promotion will alienate a lot of people, since it's basically a direct insult to anyone with fewer than 400 friends. Telling your fans that they have to pay more because they don't use Facebook the way you want them to (or don't use it at all) is not going to endear you to them. "You have been weighed in the balance of customers, and found wanting."
I'm all for creators trying to leverage the evangelistic powers of their fans, but the creators of Andy X have really missed the mark. Their promotion comes across less as a reward for fans who have big social circles and more as a punishment for those who don't—and it doesn't encourage either group to do anything useful.
Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
Techdirt is one of the few remaining truly independent media outlets. We do not have a giant corporation behind us, and we rely heavily on our community to support us, in an age when advertisers are increasingly uninterested in sponsoring small, independent sites — especially a site like ours that is unwilling to pull punches in its reporting and analysis.
While other websites have resorted to paywalls, registration requirements, and increasingly annoying/intrusive advertising, we have always kept Techdirt open and available to anyone. But in order to continue doing so, we need your support. We offer a variety of ways for our readers to support us, from direct donations to special subscriptions and cool merchandise — and every little bit helps. Thank you.
–The Techdirt Team
Filed Under: andy x, influence, movies, social media
Companies: facebook
Reader Comments
Subscribe: RSS
View by: Time | Thread
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Dunbar's number
What's funny in this context is that the users the promotion rewards the most (ie, the ones with >= 400 friends) are the users least likely to be influential. If a user's friend count is significantly higher than Dunbar's number, it's a pretty good sign that the user is friending a lot of people who s/he doesn't have close or stable relationships with. Conversely, a user with only a few Facebook friends is likely to be friending other users based on having a meaningful relationship...so a user with 50 friends is far more likely to influence those friends than a user with 500 friends.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Dunbar's number
I think part of the issue is that establishing and maintaining relationships takes time and we can only do so much with our time. People have work, school, families to take care of and deal with, etc... and here just isn't enough time to establish and maintain good relationships with everyone.
One could argue that the Internet and social media has made the relationship process slightly more time efficient, but still ...
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: Dunbar's number
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Dunbar's number
http://www.cracked.com/article_14990_what-monkeysphere.html
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
The downside is they placed a value of 1 cent directly on your "status", and this will hurt because it devalues your "community" that you were so proud of a second ago because you were so popular you had X00 friends.
There is also the idea that they are so stupid they think that giving someone a "cookie" for having so many friend will make them tell all of their friends. Except people are less likely to talk about the deal, so that they remain one of the privileged few who are treated special. The first rule of being upper crust is don't talk about being upper crust.
A much better way to do it would have been to say, your not like other Facebook people friending everything, we would like to give you a chance to see our new film. In return for the lower entry point we ask that you honestly give us feedback and mention our film to your friends. We would of course love a huge audience, but what good would be hitting up someone with 6000 "friends" who even if they comment about us the comment is lost in a sea of updates and farmville messages?
Treating the metric of number of "friends" as actual influence is backwards. Anyone who spends anytime living online knows the kind of person with 6000 friends, they email you every cute freaking thing they ever see... until you friend them on facebook and just don't look at their updates anymore.
The people with tighter communities are more likely to talk about the things they encounter that are cool, and much more likely to be taken seriously by that circle of people.
Quality not quantity is what you want in the end.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re:
"Rolling" because it only benefits snowballs which are already rolling.
So, feed the fat, let the skinny starve.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Clearly you haven't bothered to actually read the copy of the promotion. It clearly states its intention and motive behind this campaign:
" We're doing this because, as independent filmmakers, we rely on word of mouth to help get the message out. This way we can continue making films independent of the big guys.
If you like the movie, and what we're doing, please talk about it online and help us spread the word. "
That last paragraph which was omitted from your article looks like a clear encouragement and call to action to me. Maybe they could have worded it better, but it's fantastic to see independent content creators up the bar in engaging with their audiences directly this way. Previously, you'd only see this sort of thing done by a studio.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re:
I could go onto some forum right now and tell everybody how great XYZ movie is, I don't need friends to do that.
This is just a cheapshot at hermits & people who aren't interested in "friendship", you know, those sad pathetic weirdos, like me, who "failed" at the social game.
...I don't even know why I feel so worked about this, this sort of thing has been going on for years...
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re:
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re:
No, I saw it. Every website on the internet says "please share with your friends" - that doesn't really count.
it's fantastic to see independent content creators up the bar in engaging with their audiences directly this way
Up the bar? I don't think so...
But yes, I love to see people experimenting and trying new things - I just think that this particular idea is pretty silly, and likely to annoy a lot of customers.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Clearly you haven't bothered to actually read the copy of the promotion. It clearly states its intention and motive behind this campaign:
" We're doing this because, as independent filmmakers, we rely on word of mouth to help get the message out. This way we can continue making films independent of the big guys.
If you like the movie, and what we're doing, please talk about it online and help us spread the word. "
That last paragraph which was omitted from your article looks like a clear encouragement and call to action to me. Maybe they could have worded it better, but it's fantastic to see independent content creators up the bar in engaging with their audiences directly this way. Previously, you'd only see this sort of thing done by a studio.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
This is probably the first time I'm gonna go out of my way to bitch about a movie since the crapfest that was Micheal Bay's Transformers.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
I suspect that most peoples' friends list are split in a similar way if they use Facebook to keep track of actual friends and family, rather than as a numbers game or just accepting any stranger who asks. It's an interesting way of leveraging social media for advertising, but I don't see anything other than a gimmick than may or may not work for this film. Especially as people with less "friends" have to pay more, so people with more relevant friends might be left out because they don't have arbitrary numbers to back that up. Having said that, it's nice to see a short film getting some attention, and I hope it does work for them in this instance.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Someone should tell these guys that Capcom Science doesn't work in real life.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Just where might this scheme eventually go? What is the hidden agenda? Looks like astroturf, smells like astroturf ...
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
GOLD DUST AND GOLD BARS FOR SALE
Attention: Sir/ Madam,
I am Prince Kwabena Mensah from Obuasi Community here in Ghana.I Am a Representative of the local Gold miners here in Obuasi Community Ghana. We have the capability of producing between 50-100 kilos of Gold Dust Monthly.
( The product Available Below )
Commodity : Gold Dust / Gold Bars
Available Quantity : 300kg
Origin : Ghana
Quality: 22+ Carats
Purity: 94.67%
Packaging: In metal Boxes.
Terms and conditions:
In as much as I intend to establish a cordial business relationship with you, Interested buyer will have to arrange and come down to Ghana for inspection on our products, take a random sample for test at the ( Government Geological Survey Department ), having been satisfy with the assay report of the Gold, buyer/ seller will then sign ( Sales and Purchase Contract/Agreement ).
I shall be grateful to furnish you with any further information that you may require after hearing from you and shall consider it a privilege doing business with you to foster a cordial and long-lasting business relationship between both parties. Below are my contact information
Name: Prince Kwabena Mensah
Email: princekwabenamensah@gmail.com
Website: www.princekwabenagold.webs.com
Phone Number: +233 5417 94585
Skype: princekwabenamensah
We are waiting your purchase interest and quick responds.
Best Regards,
Prince Kwabena Mensah
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: GOLD DUST AND GOLD BARS FOR SALE
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: GOLD DUST AND GOLD BARS FOR SALE
http://boingboing.net/2012/03/01/tory-lord-tells-peers-about-a.html
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
The relationship stuff is kinda over-rated other than it makes it somewhat more likely that an ad associated with a name you know has a better chance of being recalled.
If you ask people whether ads work on them, everyone says no. I get it. So let's just say that simple exposure to ads tends to work on *other* people.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re:
... that said, my friends telling me about stuff has about as much chance of achieving the same results.
mind you, Someone has to spend the money to justify all those infomercials for junk products on TV (or the very existence of some things that get advertised), so clearly there are people this doesn't apply to.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re:
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
On the face of it
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
...Of course there's always the possibility that somebody is trying an experiment that they know will fail, not to see if it works, but merely to find out things. In that case the experiment succeeds as an experiment because the whole point is collection of knowledge. :)
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
No One Called This. . .
Channelling "A Knight's Tale" are we?
Bryan
[ link to this | view in chronology ]