REGISTER NOW: Uncomfortable Conversations: The Skills Crisis
REGISTER: 8THIRTYFOUR Skills Survival School Founding Cohort

Buy 'Em or Beat 'Em: Zuckerberg's Approach to Social

Written by

Share This Post:

A person holding a smart phone sitting next to a cup of coffee.

The latest controversy surrounding Trump’s posts on Facebook, the movie, Social Dilemma, and Russian hackers all have one thing in common—Mark Zuckerberg.

Zucked In

What started out as a Harvard prank has become the largest social network in the world and skyrocketed Zuckerberg to international fame. Today, Facebook has over 2.5 billion users. The powerful features provided through pages, groups, stories and advertising make Facebook an indispensable part of a marketer’s stack.
Most of these features were born through other social networks—SnapChat, Twitter, LinkedIn, TikTok etc and then copied by the man himself, Zuckerberg. His strategy has always been to buy the competing network (Instagram) or copy its features—stories, reels, etc. If you see a new feature rolled out on any other network, it’s only a matter of time before it makes it to Facebook and Instagram.

Nowhere to Go But Zuck

A Bloomberg article from 2017 reported on Facebook copying SnapChat for a fourth time. The article goes on to state the effect of the copycatting resulted in plummeting stock and slower user growth. Apparently not selling to Facebook came at a heavy cost for SnapChat. According to a Quartz article published in 2019, “Facebook, Google, and Amazon control 80% of the U.S. online advertising market with virtually no regulation, in addition to mediating much of the world’s communications and commerce.” The article goes on to report that Facebook has somehow managed to enrage everyone on both sides of the aisle—and the Atlantic—with its behavior. Its dissembling response to Russian inference in western elections, disinterested approach to stopping misinformation and hate speech, and non-stop scandals surveilling its users and mishandling their data has made it Silicon Valley’s most visible political target for liberals and Ted Cruz alike.

However, if you ask Zuckerberg, Facebook isn’t a monopoly. In fact, they recently hired a policy manager whose time is dedicated to convincing politicians Facebook isn’t a monopoly…which definitely sounds like something a monopoly wouldn’t do. Right? As marketers, we don’t have a choice on whether we utilize Facebook or Instagram, and it makes our lives extremely difficult. Whenever Facebook makes an update—which inevitably makes it harder for us to post/function—there’s nothing we can do about it. We can’t contact them and complain. We can’t go somewhere else. We just have to deal.

Our hope is lawmakers will step up and hold Facebook accountable for its shady business practices and unethical behavior. Until then, we’re all forced to play nice in the sandbox.

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Recent Posts

Something on Your Mind?

Everyone knows the skills gap exists. Not enough people are asking what it's actually costing us.

Kim is partnering with mibiznetwork for a new series focused on the Hard Cost of Soft Skills - what skills are missing, what businesses are doing because of it, and most importantly... the fix. 

You can watch the first episode intro at the link in bio.
This is your Monday reminder that nobody has it all figured out at first.

Owning what makes you weird and unique takes time... and work. 

You can start that work at a Big Deal Energy workshop. First one is on June 23. Link in bio.
The brands winning in AI search aren't doing anything new; they just never stopped doing what worked.

Kim was quoted in incmagazine alongside business leaders talking about generative engine optimization, and her message is one worth hearing right now. The terminology is different, the tools are different, but the foundation is exactly the same.

Full article at the link in bio.
Big Deal Energy starts with questioning the status quo and the rules you've been told to follow. They were built for blending in, not standing out.

Thank you to fox17morningmix for the spotlight on our upcoming workshops. 

Watch the full segment at the link in bio.
Being open and being honest aren't the same thing, and according to Grace Gavin, most leaders haven't figured that out yet.

Grace is the co-founder of Know Honesty, and she joined Maddie on the Happy Hour Hustle podcast to talk about the communication gaps costing teams more than they realize.

If you lead people, this episode is for you. Link in bio.