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Facebook’s bad case of not loving you

 

 

Crap, cant Facebook get privacy right? (photo: Merkley)

Crap, can't Facebook get privacy right? (photo: Merkley)

This isn’t a ‘worst case’ but it’s certainly not a ‘best case’ so i’m calling it a ‘bad case’ of marketing driving the exploitation of the customer relationship in social media.

 Facebook has touched off a lot of pro- and anti-sentiment in the news this week about amendments it recently made to its Terms of Service (TOS), particularly around amending its rights to retain all of a user’s data even after the user has deleted their account. First, a quick summary of what happened:

  1. Original Facebook blog post from Feb 4 – hey, how you bin? We just made a tiny, teensy change, no need to bother even looking at it, really.
  2. The new TOS – all your bases are belong to us, and all the data that resides therein.
  3. Example of initial negative reaction – our privacy was an illusion! Facebook wants to sell us to Coke/Pepsi/Reebok/GoDaddy.com!
  4. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg responds – hey, it wasn’t a big deal, it’s all a bit too complicated for you to understand
  5. Zuckerberg rebutted – customers aren’t ready to forgive him yet, and experts still have axes to grind.
  6. Argh! Now really knowledgeable people are comparing Facebook’s TOS to its competitors! Noooo!

Clearly a raw nerve has been brushed, and this is not the first time Facebook has underestimated how important users believe their data rights to be, even if not actually under threat and even if never actually exercised. How could this have been made less painful?

Don’t enact such big, clumsy changes to your TOS!

Do you really need the right to everything in perpetuity? Almost certainly not. Must it pertain to every kind of data? In every situation? Definitely not. This is an example of “just in case” thinking by legal and marketing teams under pressure to safeguard future revenues from this data, leading to bad contract law being drafted. The amendments could have been more specific, less wide-ranging and less open to interpretation and much of this would have never happened.

Engage the customer in drafting the changes

Users only heard about this after it had been enacted. You can defuse the backlash before it even swells if you call for contributions to some new amendments to the TOS, get users collaborating on drafting amendments based around the intent of the changes you want to make.

Communicate the changes one-to-one

90% of the outraged Facebook users never saw the blog post, they first heard about this in one of the more sensational early news stories that broke. And the probably never stuck around to read the more balanced, considered follow-up articles. They’ve read a headline and the first paragraph of an early story and stormed off, their worst fears confirmed. It’s going to take a lot of dialogue to bring that user back to the discussion, much less change their opinion. These changes should have been communicated directly to users first, using the very !^%$# tools that all Facebook’s audiences sees every time they login – the news feed and inbox. Do most Facebook users even know there’s a Facebook blog? I very much doubt it.

The customer is always right, so let the customer win

Users weren’t given the option of opting-in to the new TOS, they were just informed it had changed. Instead, Facebook should prove to its users that they have control by offering them the option of opting-out of the TOS changes and either leaving Facebook for good or continuing in some kind of diminished user state subject to the previous TOS until they choose to accept the new TOS.

No, really, the customer is always right

Customers have spoken loud-and-clear – they don’t like these new changes. They REALLY don’t. Take note of that. Rewrite the TOS again to take account of what your customers have told you. All around the world, Facebook users are beginning to think twice about what they post to their social network – that’s exactly the kind of consciously mediated interaction that Facebook cannot afford its audience to do if it’s to monetize. It totally buggers your marketing insights and your responses to advertising.

Nothing is worth that risk.

25 Other Comments

26 Responses to “Facebook’s bad case of not loving you”

  1. [...] Outrage is well documented throughout the blog-o-sphere. [...]

  2. C-C says:

    Nice to see you back in all your glory!

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  3. Amir Khan says:

    Thanks for sharing information in a great way. Btw Joanne you’re getting bulky..Please control your weight.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  4. C-C says:

    Oh Drew …

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  5. Extremely helpful explanation. I am reposting to my blog. Good job!!

    Cheers,
    Connie

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  6. Ook says:

    Probably a Jewish American.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  7. Ook says:

    Good Internet sales idea: a cat hair vacuum cleaner for keyboards.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  8. Ook says:

    The Weather Underground, recently brought back into the limelight by election 2008, chose their name well.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  9. Ook says:

    Is this some sort of outreach program or something? Why not get system that require registration to post?

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  10. Ook says:

    Maybe appoint as moderator whoever deleted some of my choice posts.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  11. khaphishan says:

    like sarah in prison break

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  12. xrenube says:

    sub ORL^Y for a free peace!

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  13. shn1325 says:

    haha truedat=) the british one

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  14. xaechireon says:

    Facebook’s mama is so fat you could miss a season of Simpsons when she walked past the telly.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  15. phoenixeyefist says:

    DONT HAVE FACEBOOK ACCOUNT… HAHAHA

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  16. shortstop20 says:

    I’d pee in her butt.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  17. leo267 says:

    “if you can’t get out, maybe you shouldn’t get in in the first place”

    that’s what she said.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  18. chick7489 says:

    what was that? i never seen someone do that beforethat was hilarious… i didnt see that one comming haha [=

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  19. LizzyAston says:

    i love it when people correct grammar, they always use capital letters, full stops and punctuation

    penis

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  20. coffee says:

    the fact that Facebook change their TOS back so quickly is an indication that they knew they were wrong in the first place

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  21. NikeMckenzie says:

    onleh 2 peepz wit no fwiends

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  22. EmotionToilet says:

    What if your friend posts a picture and you tag yourself in it and you really like that picture. And then they close their Facebook page, and that picture is no longer available. Wouldn’t that suck? You’re in the picture, so you partially have ownership of it. This is where Facebook steps in and says, we’re going to keep the picture on our servers so all your friends can still look at it. And I think that’s okay.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  23. Floodedgunner says:

    Until a picture of you gets posted that you happen to not like, say it’s you in a bad way, and you don’t want it on the web. Or someone has a picture of you doing something with someone that you wanted to keep a secret, or that reveals something embarrassing about you. you’d want that picture gone, right? Well too bad, Facebook will keep it.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  24. boydgarrick says:

    You don’t have any ownership to a photograph in which you appear; the photographer is the owner. You have the right to not have your likeness used for financial gain without your approval, but you don’t own the photo in any way.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  25. nalexander21 says:

    Now when people keep asking me – are you on facebook – I can send them a link to explain clearly why not.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

  26. nalexander21 says:

    People misunderstand copyright, but this video explains it well. It is not the ownership of your life. It is the commercial use of your work to make profit for a corporation that has fooled you into donating it to them… forever.

    This comment was originally posted on Rocketboom

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