Additional Information
Content
Think BR: Facebook's Graph Search - a first impression
Facebook Graph Search could change our understanding of what a social network is, writes Philip Dyte, paid social planner, iProspect.
Philip Dyte, paid social planner, iProspect
One thing we know is that Graph Search is not a direct competitor to Google, or at least not Google as we currently know it. However, Google’s increasing interest in the area - as represented by flirtations with personalized results, and also Google Now for mobile - means that Facebook may have stolen a march on the next big thing.
Palming off traditional web queries to Bing may also prove to be the largest traffic boost the Microsoft engine has ever had, but that’s no reason to think that users will necessarily embrace it any more than they have.
After all, Bing has been Facebook’s mapping tool for a while now and has not exactly caused a great migration from Google’s product.
There is some excitement in some quarters about the potential for ad revenue fromGraph Search. However, I think some people are rather over-egging it, at least for the time being. Before Graph Search can become a viable commercial product, it needs to be something that has real consumer value.
Currently, it is unclear as to how sophisticated the tool really is. It relies very heavily not only on users actively providing information that they do not necessarily always provide - check-in location, employer, reviews - but also the underlying systems that join the dots between multiple, similar-but-different data points.
It’s not a straightforward task. For example, I went to Corsica for a holiday last year, but when labelling my photos I discovered that Facebook thought (and still thinks) it was in Haifa, Israel.
The other obstacle facing Graph Search is that it does not appear to have a timetable to appear on mobile devices. Given that one of the functionalities that I can see offering real consumer value right off the bat is looking up places friends have been to and liked (restaurants, sightseeing, venues etc), this seems disappointing and somewhat myopic. After all, that particular breed of search would be right at home on a mobile device when out and about. On desktop? I’m not so sure.
The other major user value that I can envisage would be the ability to look up photos of friends in/at/during/doing a particular thing. But then, I’m not entirely sure how that would lend itself to advertising. Perhaps if you are looking at your friends at Disney World, Disney (or indeed someone else) could display a relevant offer.
I suspect that Facebook will rely once again on innovative start-ups and PMDs to jump in and develop the product, in much the same manner as Facebook Apps before. It also represents another incentive for anyone building apps of any description - web, mobile, or Facebook - to incorporate the Open Graph.
After all, if Facebook continue to expand its list of ‘custom edges’ - that’s allowing brands to create their own action verbs such as ‘Listened’ or ‘Watched’, to sit alongside ‘Like’ - then presumably that will feed into Graph Search too. So if I am building an app around cooking, I code in the customedge ‘Cooked’, and then my app and/or brand might show up in the hypothetical search: [My friends] in [London] who [cooked] in [the last year].
Whatever happens, it’s another big push from Facebook into using big data to personalise the life digital. Given that Facebook’s long-term ambition, especially in developing markets, is to be your passport for the web, this makes a lot ofsense.
At this rate, the Facebook of the future may soon start to challenge the definition of what a social network actually is.
Philip Dyte, paid social planner, iProspect
Additional Information
Latest jobs Jobs web feed
- PR Account Manager fishtank 24k to 33k per year GBP, Surrey
- Brand Manager Radisson Blu Edwardian, London Competitive , South Kensington, London
- Junior Account Manager fishtank 22k to 28k per year GBP, Buckinghamshire
- senior planner > SPORTS BRANDS collectivo Up to £90,000 plus benefits, London
- Head of Media, Marketing & Communications PGA Competitive, Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands
- Graphic/Web Designer fishtank 27k to 35k per year GBP, United Kingdom
Most read
Most commented

BR Insight
Digital Integration: Connecting the Dots (Webcast) External website
Integrated digital marketing offers huge opportunities to engage, servic...
Mobile 2013: Top 5 Need-to-Knows to Fully Cash In (Expert Reports) External website
Mobile marketing is coming of age, and the pace of change is now exponen...
Internet Shopping: 6 Quick Wins to Revive Your Online Sales (Expert Reports) External website
With UK consumers spending an average of £1,083 a year online, int...
Conversational Mobile Marketing: Engage Customers and Empower Advocates (Expert Reports) External website
The pressure is on for marketers and mobile operators to embrace a strat...
Tablets: Redefining Consumer Experiences (Webcast) External website
As a nation, the UK is media and technology obsessed with over half of t...
Harness the Power of Your Customer's Digital Voice (Webcast) External website
All customers have the potential to become your brand advocates, driving...









