Why social media "Groups" are suddenly having a moment
Groups on social media are nothing new. Spaces for like-minded people to congregate and discuss specific subjects — from hobbies to pets and celebrities — date in one form or another to the platform’s earliest days. These Groups have long been segmented into roughly three classes: open (or general admission), closed (requiring admin approval for new members) and secret (invisible to outside search and accessible only with a direct link).
But for a combination of technical and cultural reasons, Groups are suddenly having their moment, expanding at rates that far outpace the growth of the networks that spawned them.
LinkedIn revamped its own Groups offering this fall for its 500-plus million users, adding the ability to share pics and videos, as well as receive comment notifications.
Meanwhile, Facebook Group membership is up 40 percent in the last year, with 1.4 billion people — more than half of Facebook’s massive user base — now using Groups every month. Of those, 200 million people belong to so-called “meaningful Groups,” considered a vital part of users’ daily lives. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has said he’d like to see 1 billion users in “meaningful” Groups within five years.
Behind Groups' newfound popularity
This hockey-stick growth is explained in part by algorithm shifts and platform tweaks. Even before the Cambridge Analytica crisis reached its crescendo, Facebook had recalibrated its algorithms to prioritize engagement with friends, family and Groups, while downranking public content shared by businesses, brands and media. Under the auspices of community building, we’re now seeing significantly more posts from Groups on our feeds and fewer posts from company Pages or media publishers.
At the same time, social networks have improved the basic nuts-and-bolts functionality of Groups. Facebook has tested a dedicated Groups tab inside its mobile app, so users can find all of their groups in one place, as well as discover new ones. Beefed up tools for scheduling posts and screening members have made it easier to build and scale Groups (though critics point out that the kind of robust search tools and browsable archives now commonplace on platforms like Slack are still sorely lacking).
But truly understanding the growth — and future evolution — of Groups requires applying a broader cultural lens. 2018 represented a crisis year for social media — and this was largely a crisis of trust. It’s critical to remember that social networks initially represented a sort of safe space: a refuge from the chaos and threats posed by the vast, anonymous Internet at large. Back in the day, most interactions on social media were with real people, many of them friends and family.
But that sort of intimacy and collegiality was partly undone by social media’s own success. With time, and the addition of several billion users, these “walled garden” began to feel more like a Wild West. Newsfeeds overflowed with clickbait, recipe videos and salesy spam. Developers scraped off personal data and ads grew increasingly invasive. This came to a head in the 2016 US election cycle and its aftermath, as platforms that once seemed “real” and refreshing became filled with fake news and fake users.
All of which makes the prospect of joining a Group remarkably appealing. In particular, closed groups, which require admin approval before joining, can seem a throwback to an earlier era of social media. Dialogue is actually productive. Suggestions tend to be useful and actionable. Snark and sarcasm are generally kept to a minimum, as are marketing and sales talk. In my own backyard, for example, the 6,000-member strong Girl Gang Vancouver Group on Facebook has earned a reputation as a thriving community for female creatives in media, communications and tech. Members of the closed Group share jobs and resources and announce events and workshops. Clear posting guidelines preempt spam and robust moderation keeps the feed focused. It feels little like Facebook at large, and that’s the point.
The potential (and pitfalls) of Groups for brands
So for companies and brands who rely on social media to reach customers, are Groups the panacea for addressing dipping engagement and declining reach? More broadly, does the Group concept point to a way forward for social media in general — a means to recover the trust and authenticity that made social platforms so revolutionary to begin with.
Well, maybe.
As with so much in social media, the devil is in the details. On Facebook, for instance, early corporate adopters have rushed in, eager to reach customers cut off by Facebook’s new algorithm. Thus far, results have been mixed. Health tracker Fitbit, for instance, created more than a dozen Groups in major cities. While the company boasts millions of followers on its main Facebook Page, its Groups have struggled to sustain a few hundred members each and posting is sporadic.
Brands finding success, on the other hand, have learned to walk a fine line — creating a space where passionate users can express themselves, while working hard behind the scenes to keep discussions vibrant and focused. Indoor cycling workout company Peloton boasts more than 100,000 members in its official closed group, which now registers upward of 300 posts and 5,000 comments a day. But this is no accident. Members are vigorously screened and admins are quick to flag and remove content that violates community guidelines.
Nor does the work stop there. Scaling Groups presents challenges as intimacy is easily lost amid a sea of new faces and updates. Spamming and self-promotion by members are ever-present risks. Meanwhile, brands need to resist the temptation to sprinkle in their own marketing copy. Even a few heavy handed calls to action can undermine an otherwise thriving Group and send skeptical users fleeing to less commercial alternatives.
In the end, the potential of Groups is deeply tied up with social media’s own unique power. Current challenges aside, social media redefined communication precisely because it enables people to connect with people, without an intermediary or gatekeeper. Brands that learn to set up Groups and skillfully recede into the background — to let customers connect on a human level, not a transactional one — might just be able to recapture that original spirit.
Check out more on the rise of Groups and other key social media shifts in Hootsuite's 2019 Social Media Trends Report.
Customer Relationship Director at Computools Israel: IT Consulting and Software Solutions
6 年I thought they are almost dead
Copywriter, Naming Specialist, Communication Thinking
6 年Social media groups are definitely having "a moment": https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/mobs-are-killing-people-in-india-based-on-false-rumors-spread-through-whatsapp
Photo Lab Technician, One hour photo at Wal-Mart, Canada
6 年Makes you wonder why,is it truly a similar interest, or is is a pack mentality?
Technical Writer | Technical Editor | Engineer Whisperer || AI, API, HCI, and UX — and just enough git/bash/regex/java/ruby/js/python/c/c++/k8s to be dangerous
6 年i'm still on some email mailing lists (or direct-lineage offshoots thereof) that had started before the web existed.? and since gmail smacked hotmail out of the running back in 2003, i've had an easily searchable database of 15 years' worth of personal conversations with individuals AND groups.? that's the golden-standard measuring-stick in my world — to get me to adopt any facsimile on a corporate platform requires a lot of critical-mass peer pressure, 'cause the offerings rarely approach what i already have access to.??