Ed Lallo is a veteran professional photographer who has worked around the world. He is a skilled image storyteller. Ed is based in Austin, Texas.

20 responses to “The Social Facts about Facebook, LinkedIn and Plaxo.”

  1. Barney

    You’ve come to pretty much the same conclusions that I have, Ed. I use Facebook and Twitter. I am signed up for LinkedIn and Plaxo, but only for the free services and I hardly ever visit either of them – only when someone asks to be a contact on one or the other. I love Facebook and Twitter because they are free and easy to use and really social. One can have e-conversations with people via both platforms (and I frequently do). And they are both good places to notify people of blog postings, etc.

    I tried Plurk for a while, but the interface is really horrible and I couldn’t find any advantage over Twitter.

    I shall be interested to read any other conclusions you come to.

  2. Jean

    I agree with your conclusions as well. I first joined Linked-In (when invited) and hardy ever go there. It’s a clunky site. FB is sooo many things, from a great time-waster to valuable networking system. I enjoy the occasional game of Scrabble and keep up with my relatives and friends. And people are darn funny!

  3. Lorraine Benini

    Agree with all you said…and I find Facebook offers another feature that will help some of us. Our event ARTS Encounters is entering its fifth year and people have asked to be notified. These result in a database that is now difficult to send out, because due to the large numbers, even though we break them down, could be read as spam. So I have built an ARTS Encounters page and a separate Benini page and people can become fans and thus notified of the events through Facebook. Am shifting over to that now.

  4. David Henderson

    Ed,

    Terrific piece and valuable perspective. Thanks.

    David

  5. Earl Carter

    After reading your post about Facebook I decided it was about time to give it a try. Thanks for eliminating the others for me. I too am embarking on the social networking experiment.

  6. Deb

    At first I thought LinkedIn would be my social media of choice, but totally agree with you. A friend showed me the ins/outs of Facebook about 10 days ago, so I didn’t make the mistakes she did:) Now I’m hooked and building up this network vs. LinkedIn.
    Thanks for your thoughts – confirms my direction. Deb

  7. Chris Chandler

    Ed-
    I enjoyed reading your comments about all these social media sites. It will most likely save me a lot of time.

    Do you belong to and/or know about the “Social Media Club”? I would like to hear your thoughts?
    Thank you for your time.
    Cheers,
    Chris Chandler, CA

  8. Dot

    What’s best? Depends on what you’re looking for.

    LinkedIn’s growth is more than double that of Facebook. LinkedIn provides things that Facebook can’t, such as the ability to provide and check online written references – which is critical in this age where HR will reveal nothing.

    The serious business people that I know say that LinkedIn is like Facebook for people with jobs. They’re content with being able to update their status at will, and receive the updates of their contacts. They aren’t looking to chat or become fans. They’re surprisingly open to mutually beneficial alliances and opportunities. LinkedIn is a little antisocial, as has been implied, from the standpoint that it’s really built for business. On the other hand, your LinkedIn account is a form of social collateral that really comes in handy when you become available for work and have people to assist you in finding your next gig. I guess it’s social, but not interactive.

    Recently I added a Facebook profile. To me, I may ask business contacts who I meet to LinkIn, but I wouldn’t ask them to be a friend on Facebook. I just feel like that would be strange. On the other hand, the friends I’ve added on Facebook are my buddies who care about me as a person, but I’m not linkedin with most of them. These people want to hear about my life, my kids, my family.

    You could have a more business-like Facebook profile, but what fun would that be? The statistics imply that the executives prefer LinkedIn – possibly because of its simplicity and relative quiet. If you’re in certain lines of business, I think a LinkedIn profile is a must-have. I’m not an executive and I have really found the free service to be of tremendous value to me.

    If your customers are not high-level executives though, perhaps a more informal media would work better. : ) Good luck!

  9. Bill Smith

    Very interesting article and I agree with what you are saying. I have both a Facebook and Linked In Profile and I use them largely for different purposes.

    Linked In is all business, not a bad thing but don’t expect to make friends there and the platform is showing it’s age compared to Facebook.

    Facebook is both personal and professional and I do like the different apps available and it is just so much more user friendly.

    Cheers

    Bill

  10. Keith De La Rue

    Ed –

    I am of the opinion that you may have judged LinkedIn a little harshly. It really does have value as a business networking tool – and I mean with the *free* services *only*. I have never seen a need to upgrade. I also use Facebook and Twitter. Each of these services has great value to me, and I can’t give totally clear-cut boundaries between them. (Yes, to some extent LinkedIn is “business” and Facebook is “personal”, but I don’t like making such distinctions anyway.)

    One clear benefit of LinkedIn is the ability to have colleagues or clients write independent recommendations.

    Read more about how I have used these services in my article: “Wanted – used car for $8,516.58″. Perhaps start here and refer back: http://delarue.net/blog/2008/03/found-car/.

    – Keith.

  11. Betsy

    OK, add me to the middle ground too. I’ve been on linked in about 6 years now and have loved the work aspect and networking aspect of it. I recently got on Facebook and – while I love it – it’s a little broad and busy for a ADD person like me. Also, a practical point for those of us living behind corporate firewalls: many companies block Facebook but allow LinkedIn.

    And one more thing. I’m a geek, but also anxious to keep the lines a little distinct between work and home, and I’m not so sure I want my boss trolling my personal wall and public discussions and pictures with friends.

  12. Nikki

    I have been feeling guilty about not visiting my LinkedIn profile, not “connecting” with people there, and not spending enough time in the network.

    How ironic, then, that with some random clicking about in LinkedIn, I found this article, which alleviated my guilt entirely and prompted me to update my LinkedIn status to “Nikki is rarely on LinkedIn but often on Facebook. Same name, better status lines, I promise.”

    Thanks. There’s already enough stress in my life.

  13. Todd

    I wanted this article to live up to its title and provide the social facts of social networking. I want to know: After initial contact, how are users remaining “social?” Now that I have a list of friends/contacts, what do I do? How do I stay keep my online presence relevant? Someone, please, write that article.

  14. Tom Roux

    Ed,

    I have to agree with Keith De La Rue’s comment that you may have been a bit harsh on LinkedIn. I’ve been a devoted user of LI’s free service for several years and with great success.
    For further details on the value of LinkedIn, check out my recent post: Are you a networking LION or lamb?

    I also have a Facebook profile that is intended (mostly) for non-business use only.

  15. Lisa

    If you are going to control your online visibility for business purposes rather than have it control you, my vote is on LinkedIn. It is much more robust and focused than FB and the chances of finding your kids on it is a lot lower:). If used well (and it can be for free) you can generate an amazing number of contacts and get to someone you need to. My experience with FB was reading about people doing the most trivial things – like getting their haircut! While that may be interesting on a social level it certainly doesn’t do the trick professionally.

  16. Mac

    I have accounts on Facebook, LinkedIn and Plaxo. Each of them has some advantages and disadvantages.

    Facebook is the definite winner for social interactions, fun and mobile integration (the iPhone app is really nice), but is fiercely controlling about what information you can export (basically you can’t export almost anything). So really a failure at any sort of connection/contact management that is somewhat critical in business.

    LinkedIn has focused on business connections and tools instead of social ones. Features like the ability to show a connection chain, recommendations and searching by company can be invaluable in business applications. I have recently decided to seek out a career move. LinkedIn has been very useful in checking out companies I’m talking with. I search for the company and see who works there, or has worked there that I may have a contact in common with. That way I can get a more reliable sense of the company environment and culture when considering any offers. I think it’s a real disadvantage that you have to pay a subscription for simple features like sending messages or getting introduced, and wonder if it’s a sustainable long term business model given the pressure from Facebook. Although, unlike Facebook, you can easily export your connections from LinkedIn.

    Plaxo entered the game with focus on contact management and syncing, which can be very useful, but not sure enough people will pay for the features necessary to really make it effective. I think it wants to be the best of both Facebook and LinkedIn, but the boat has already sailed, and I really doubt it’s differentiating feature of automatic contact syncing and updating is enough for its network to reach critical mass to make it useful.

  17. Omer Duesterhaus

    Just want to say your article is brilliant. The clarity in your post is simply spectacular and i can assume you are an expert on this field. Well with your permission allow me to grab your rss feed to keep up to date with future post. Thanks a million and please keep up the fabulous work

  18. David Cervi

    Just stumbled on this article and discussion. A year and a half on, the landscape has changed somewhat now that Facebook offers better business options etc, but it still seems that a great many people prefer to keep Faceboook personal and LinkedIn professional, since LinkedIn is, mercifully, fairly free of the mindless and sometimes tasteless banter that too often clutters Facebook. I really don’t see this changing any time soon.

    As for Plaxo etc, I have yet to meet anyone who can justufy putting much effort into any other online social networks besides the big players LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

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