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MySpace Is Over; Long Live Facebook

By Catharine P. Taylor | Dec 19, 2008

Mashable has posted a list of the top U.S. social networking sites, according to Nielsen Online, and though MySpace still dominates, with a uniqFacebook will trump MySpace in 2009.ue audience in November of 59.1 million, that stat barely counts when you compare its year-on-year growth to the no. 2 social networking site, Facebook. In that category, Facebook shows 116 percent growth compared to last year, while MySpace had 3 percent growth compared to November last year. Wow.

Facebook’s base was, not surprisingly, smaller, but as a result of growth that can only be described as meteoric, it now stands at 47.5 million users. As Mashable so rightly points out, it will surpass MySpace in unique users in 2009. Here are other telling stats: time spent per person on MySpace has declined by 23 percent; on Facebook it increased by 112 percent.

I find these numbers surprising only in how outsized they are, but maybe, upon further review, I shouldn’t be surprised at all. As some of you know, I’ve written a column on social media for Mediapost for almost a year, and, as a result, I am Facebook-ed, Plaxo-ed, LinkedIn, MySpace-ed and Twittered within an inch of my life. Writing about social media is translated by many readers as an open invitation to friend you; every morning my inbox greets me with new friends and followers. Trust me, MySpace just ain’t happening.

Since starting to write the column in February,  my Facebook friends, most of whom I’ve never met, have increased from 54 to 256. My MySpace friends have increased from one to … three. Two of those three work at MySpace, and, yes, one of those is Facebook (oops! I meant MySpace) founder Tom Anderson, who automatically becomes your MySpace friend when you sign up for an account. (I should add that I’m passive about gathering friends, even on Facebook. I haven’t sought out Facebook friends at the expense of acquiring MySpace buddies. I let them come to me.)

Some who read this will argue that, as a forty-something somewhat early adopter, I don’t fit the MySpace demo. That’s true.  But the Nielsen numbers make it painfully clear that, no matter what the MySpace demo is, MySpace is maxing out.

Catharine P. Taylor has been covering digital media and advertising for almost 15 years and is a frequent speaker at conferences about media and advertising. She posts daily to BNET Media, writes the weekly Social Media Insider column for Mediapost and also has her own advertising blog, Adverganza.com. Follow her on Twitter or subscribe to the BNET Media Twitter feed.

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  •  
    1

    kataliya1

    12/19/08 | Report as spam

    RE: MySpace Is Over; Long Live Facebook

    are you sure Tom Anderson founded facebook? that doesn't seem right...

    maybe you check the facts again before you report them.

  •  
    2

    AdScam

    12/22/08 | Report as spam

    RE: MySpace Is Over; Long Live Facebook

    Catharine...
    I am facebooked-out... Who are these people who want to be my friend, write on my wall, poke me, send me virtual martinis (what's wrong with a real one, or at least the price of a real one?) I have decided they have no life... And you know they Twitter non-stop as they crash their cars and kill people while texting. I don't get it... Yeah, I'm an old fart... But enough is enough.
    Cheers/George

  •  
    3

    evephelps

    12/22/08 | Report as spam

    RE: MySpace Is Over; Long Live Facebook

    Unlike Catherine, I do fall into the Facebook/MySpace demographic and my MySpace days are long gone. And although Facebook seemed enticing at first, (who wouldn't want to experience a high school reunion everyday of their lives?!) those days are numbered as well. As much as I enjoy wasting countless hours looking at other people's photos and reading about how they too are wasting time, I have found enough reasons why it's done more harm than good. For those of you who choose to keep on facebooking, I've come up with two simple rules. Rule #1: Never accept co-workers or clients as friends. Although it seems like a great idea to be buddy buddy with people you work with, wait until your boss sees you tagged in pictures of last night at the bar. Before you know it, your embarrassing moment will be plastered all over your office and you will be scraping your reputation off the floor. Rule #2: Never lie about something and then follow it up with posting incriminating pictures and/or status updates all over your profile. A former friend of mine decided to ditch my wedding claiming she had a violent case of food poisoning in which she was rushed to the hospital in an ambulance. A few weeks later as I was busy posting wedding photos, I noticed that she too had recently posted new pictures. With the date and time stamped right on the photos, I discovered that instead of being on her death bed, she had been partying it up at an Irish festival. I haven't talked to her since. Facebook never lies.

  •  
    4

    JasonKucherawy

    12/22/08 | Report as spam

    RE: MySpace Is Over; Long Live Facebook

    Facebook has all kinds of customization options
    for privacy. If you don't know how to figure
    out how to set it so you are protecting
    yourself from embarrassment, then you deserve
    what you get.

    facebook is great because you can make it what
    you want. You can choose who to add, who sees
    what, and whether you want any of the thousands
    of stupid apps people have made.

    Facebook will become king until the next best
    thing comes around. People will always want to
    connect and to share, Facebook or seomthing
    like it will always be with us from now on.

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