Social network aggregation

Social network aggregation is the process of collecting content from multiple social network services into a unified presentation. The task is often performed by a social network aggregator, such as Hootsuite or FriendFeed, which pulls together information into a single location,[1] or helps a user consolidate multiple social networking profiles into a single profile.[2] Various aggregation services provide tools or widgets to allow users to consolidate messages, track friends, combine bookmarks, search across multiple social networking sites, read RSS feeds for multiple social networks, see when their name is mentioned on various sites, access their profiles from a single interface, provide "live-streams," and so on.[2] Social network aggregation services attempt to organize or simplify a user's social networking experience,[3] although the idea has been satirized in the concept of a "social network aggregator aggregator."[4]

There are other related uses of social media aggregators, aside from simplifying the user's social networking experiences. Some aggregators are designed to help companies and individuals improve engagement with their brands. This is achieved by creating aggregated social streams that can be embedded into an existing website and customized to look visually intrinsic to the site. This allows potential customers to interact with all the social media posts maintained by the brand without requiring them to jump from site to site. This is beneficial to the company as this will keep customers on the brand's site for a longer period.

Social network aggregators

Social network aggregation platforms allow members to share social network activity on their social network accounts with companies, such as Twitter, YouTube, StumbleUpon, Digg, or Delicious, and other major platforms. Content appears in real-time to other members who subscribe to a particular community, eliminating the need to jump from one social media network to another, therefore, streamlining the process of updating multiple social media platforms individually.[5]

Social network aggregation systems can rely on initiation by publishers or engagement through their readers. In publisher-initiated aggregation systems, publishers combine identities, allowing their readers to see all aggregated content once subscribed. In reader-initiated systems, such as Windows Phone 7 People Hub[6] and Linked Internet UI,[7] readers combine identities, which has no impact on publishers or other readers; the publishers can still keep separate identities for different readers.

Technically, the aggregation is enabled by APIs provided by social networks. For the API to access a user's actions from another platform, the user must permit the social-aggregation platform by specifying the user-id and password of the social media to be syndicated. This concept resembles OpenID.[8] In March 2008, The Economist reported that social network services are only just beginning the move away from "walled gardens" to more open architectures. Some sites are working together on a "data portability work group," while others are focusing on a single sign-on system called OpenID to allow users to log on across multiple sites. Historically, the trend from private services to more open ones can be seen across many Internet services from email and instant messaging to the move that early online service providers made to become websites.[9] The OpenSocial initiative aims to bridge the member overlap between various online social network services.[10]

Social network aggregators such as FriendFeed represent connections between people with directed graphs. They adopt the following approach, rather than a friending one, where "A follows B" does not imply "B follows A." Each account is then represented by a node whereas the following relationship is represented by an edge. The relationships between these nodes appear to be linked to their age and their sphere of influence. The nodes which have joined the network most recently get less influence than older ones. Therefore, on social network aggregators, new nodes tend to connect to nodes with high degrees.[11]

A social media aggregator is a tool that helps users to discover and curate content from social media platforms into a single feed and gives them the option to display this feed across all marketing channels. Social media aggregators gather or "aggregate" existing social media posts from several social networks and combine them into a single feed. This social media feed then can be displayed on a website. While other types of media aggregators draw from many different sources and brands, a personal social feed aggregator like Juicer pulls content from social media accounts you own. You can find free social media aggregators as well as paid options that offer more features.

First social network aggregators

Historically, media aggregators have always existed. For example, journalists summarizing numerous pieces of information and trying to synthesize relevant content from many sources in an understandable way. The purpose is to provide understandable information for everyone about more or less complex topics, so that people will not have to spend hours finding and analyzing news from all around the world. Moreover, it was also an aggregator for job listings and other types of ads.[12]

Collecting data in social network aggregation

Performing social network aggregation requires a large range of data. First, the relevant content related to a topic and then the information about the profiles that have been reached by the content. The added value of social network aggregation is to analyze the data. They provide a correlation between the audience profiles (preferences, interests, age, location...) and the type of content. However, collecting such data may be difficult. Databases of social networks vary and may change during some updates.[13]

Applications in marketing

Social network aggregators are a powerful tool in marketing. They appear to be an efficient way to have an organized view of the content to get a better insight into the market. The need for them is real: a study provided by eMarketer,[14] shows that 43% of marketers complain about a significant lack of time to find relevant content for their business. Social network aggregators grant features to share your own content on many social media platforms to reach as many people as possible. That way, social network aggregators become a productivity enhancement tool.[12]

Overlap between multiple social-network services

The attraction of social network aggregation comes from the fact that some users tend to use multiple social networks; they have accounts on several social networking sites.[9] In November 2007, Alex Patriquin of Compete.com reported on the member overlap between various online social network services:[10]

SiteBeboFacebookFriendsterHi5LinkedInMySpaceNingOrkutPlaxo
Bebo
25%
2%
3%
1%
65%
1%
0%
0%
Facebook
4%
2%
2%
2%
64%
1%
1%
9%
Friendster
5%
23%
4%
6%
49%
2%
1%
0%
Hi5
7%
24%
4%
1%
69%
0%
2%
0%
LinkedIn
4%
42%
8%
2%
32%
8%
3%
3%
MySpace
3%
20%
1%
1%
0%
0%
0%
0%
Ning
6%
35%
6%
1%
19%
44%
2%
2%
Orkut
3%
26%
4%
7%
8%
29%
2%
1%
Plaxo
5%
48%
8%
2%
54%
34%
14%
4%

A study conducted in 2009 of 11,000 users[15] reported that the majority of MySpace, LinkedIn, and Twitter users also have Facebook accounts.

See also

Notes and references

  1. Rachael King (2007-06-18). "When Your Social Sites Need Networking". BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on June 20, 2007. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  2. Stan Schroeder (2007-07-17). "20 Ways To Aggregate Your Social Networking Profiles". Mashable. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  3. Beth Snyder Bulik (2007-06-18). "Upstart websites aim to consolidate social networking". Advertising Age. The latest trend in the space is aggregation-websites...[which] all present variations on the theme of organizing or simplifying a consumer's social-networking experience.
  4. Brian Briggs (2008-03-17). "Social Network Aggregator Aggregator AllMyFrickingFriends.com Launched". BBSpot. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  5. "Social Aggregation: defragment your online life". April 1, 2008. Archived from the original on December 29, 2009.
  6. Microsoft. "Windows Phone 7 Features". Microsoft. Retrieved 2011-11-11.
  7. Nokia (2009-09-02). "Linked Internet UI Concept". Nokia. Retrieved 2011-11-11.
  8. David Jennings (2005-08-03). "Aggregation of data across social networks". alchemi.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  9. "Everywhere and nowhere". The Economist. 2008-03-19. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  10. Alex Patriquin (2007-11-12). "Connecting the Social Graph: Member Overlap at OpenSocial and Facebook". Compete.com blog. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  11. Garg, Sanchit; Gupta, Trinabh; Carlsson, Niklas; Mahanti, Anirban. "Evolution of an Online Social Aggregation Network: An Empirical Study" (PDF). cs.ucsb.edu. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  12. Tutterow, Bryant (July 15, 2015). "Increasing social network productivity through aggregation". godaddy.com. Retrieved July 22, 2022.
  13. Virmani, C.; Pillai, A.; Juneja, D. (February 2014). "Study and analysis of Social network Aggregator". 2014 International Conference on Reliability Optimization and Information Technology (ICROIT): 145–148. doi:10.1109/ICROIT.2014.6798314. ISBN 978-1-4799-2995-5. S2CID 46691864.
  14. Benes, Ross (June 27, 2018). "Half of Marketers Believe Programmatic Is Effective". eMarketer. Retrieved July 22, 2022.
  15. "Who Uses Social Networks and What Are They Like? (Part 1)". ReadWriteWeb. July 9, 2009. Archived from the original on June 22, 2012. Retrieved September 6, 2013.
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