New Friend Connect features will let web sites offer personalized information and ads.
By Erica Naone
Google's
stepping up its social networking efforts with new features for Friend Connect
today, and the
features provide some clues as to how Google thinks social data can be used to
make money.
Friend Connect
provides a way for website owners to give their site social features without
having to build an entire social network from scratch. This type of add-on
social network tool has been increasingly popular in the last year and a half--Friend
Connect competes with offerings such as Facebook Connect, which was announced
around the same time, in the first half of 2008. Google says that about 9 billion web sites use Friend Connect,
and that the service receives about half a billion unique page views each
month.
The new Friend
Connect features collect more data about a site's visitors and provide several
ways to use it. A polling gadget gathers information about visitors' interests,
which is then shared between sites.
Using this
feature, a music site could find out which bands are their viewers' favorites, and
a fashion site could discover a user's favorite clothing brands. A new direct
messaging feature also allows Friend Connect users to contact others with
similar interests. The music site could, for example, send newsletters targeted
to users who've expressed an interest in certain 90s grunge bands. Or visitors
might be served links to the most recent articles about these bands.
But perhaps
most importantly for advertising dollars--and one must always remember that
Google is an advertising company at heart--user profiles come with an
integrated set of tools that a site owner can use to provide personalized
information, ads, and services.
Most
conveniently, Google has now integrated AdSense with FriendConnect, allowing
site owners to fine-tune the ads displayed based on users' interests, as well as
site content.
Google's
vision of advertising has always been about presenting ad content at the moment
people are actively seeking such information, and the company has always
employed sophisticated analytics to do this.
FriendConnect's
new features look like a solid step toward monetizing social data. While social
networking sites still struggle with this--users of those sites are usually
looking to socialize, and not to buy things--FriendConnect's advantage is that
the social data can be used to catch users when they're looking for useful information
or even thinking about making a purchase.