Wednesday, April 24, 2013

To Share or Not to Share - Newsroom

(Illustration by Jamtoons/iStock)

What is it about social media that draws?people in? According to Facebook?s?website, its mission is ?to make the?world more open and connected.?People use Facebook to stay connected?with friends and family, to discover?what?s going on in the world, and to?share and express what matters to them.?

But is this really true? On social media sites, are people really?connected to each other, or merely engaged in an aggregation of?anonymous contacts? While it is true that Facebook?s popularity?has increased exponentially each year?since its inception, many current users censor?what photos and comments they share,?posting only content that positions them in?the best light possible. Yet even with this,?a large amount of personal information is?being made available online that may hinder?your online reputation, as well as aid?marketers in creating targeted advertising?intended to appeal to your interests and?preferences.

Beyond capturing a user?s time and?attention, social media is deemed a safe place?to share one?s innermost thoughts and feelings?for the world ? or at least a large online?audience ? to read. The need for a sense of?community and constant audience often?means users of social media sites such as?Facebook share far more information about?themselves than they reasonably should. Gone is the demand for?privacy. Now, people put their lives on the Internet for all to?see. For Christopher Michaelson, Ph.D., an ?associate professor of?business ethics at the Opus College of Business, this means that?people don?t fully understand the extent to which they are exposing?themselves online.

Today, there is more information available to decision makers?than one can feasibly manage, make sense of or put to use.?What does this mean for marketers? Jonathan Seltzer, an instructor?of marketing at the Opus College of Business, said, ?The sheer?wealth of data that is available increases the segmentation well?beyond what was previously imaginable.? Social media sites and?online networks leverage the power of peer-to-peer relationships?and referrals to learn about their users and make money based on?what they know. ?In theory, better targeting should mean more?efficient marketing for business, and in a consumer economy that?should equate to lower costs and happier customers,? said Michael?Porter, Ed.D., director of the Master of Business Communication?program at the Opus College of Business. But this may not always?be the case.

Information is Power

Not so many years ago, large companies were cautious about?using social media sites to gather information about job applicants?for fear of legal repercussions. Today, it is common practice to?Google an applicant?s name as a way to learn more about past work?history, interests and hobbies, as well as an applicant?s personal?life. Mick Sheppeck, Ph.D., an associate professor of management?at the Opus College of Business, noted, ?Companies are increasingly?using personal information as they?search for qualified applicants and this?is likely to continue until people become?more cognizant of what they are?sharing online and who can access that?information.?

In a January 2013 WCCO segment??Beware: Your Reputation is Now Being?Googled,? Greg Swan, a digital strategist?at Weber Shandwick, noted that 70 percent?of job candidates are rejected purely?based on the results of searching one?s name?online. ?It used to be that you?d ask someone,??Have you Googled yourself lately???and we?d all ?giggle. But now that?s a real?thing,? Swan said.

That?s not to say people are naive?about what they do and don?t share online,?but many do not realize the full extent of?their actions until it?s too late. Generally speaking, social media?users can be broken into two camps in terms of how they think?about personal information and one?s right to privacy. Sheppeck?said the smaller camp believes that access to personal data is the?way of the world. Regardless of safeguards, individuals cannot protect?themselves and should quit worrying. The other, larger camp?needs to pay more attention and be mindful of what they choose?to share. ?Millennials, even more than other groups, are limited in?their awareness of how personal information is being used today,??Sheppeck said.

Targeting the Masses

According to a February 2012 survey by the Pew Research?Center, 73 percent of 2,253 adult respondents answered that they?would not be OK with a search engine (such as Google) keeping?track of their searches and using the results to personalize?future searches. And 68 percent said they were uncomfortable?with targeted advertising for the same reason: They didn?t want?anyone tracking their behavior. That being said, user actions do?not reflect these findings as millions of people routinely share the?most intimate details of their lives online.

When Facebook launched in 2004, it was heralded for its lack?of advertising. With 1 billion active monthly users as of October?2012, a lot has changed since its founding. The ?average Facebook?user is regularly commenting on photos and ?liking? content,?updating their status and connecting with friends and family, as?well as those they?ve never met. While no stranger to advertising,?the average Facebook user may not realize how her information?is being used to generate the targeted ads she sees every time?she logs in. If you recently became engaged, the ads are tailored?accordingly and may include bridesmaid dresses, photographers,?upcoming wedding shows and invitations, with many products?and vendors showing up as promoted posts in a user?s news feed.?Once you update your status to reflect your recent nuptials, the?ads will change again, likely ?focusing on the next logical step after?that blissful walk down the aisle ? the?honeymoon followed by babies.

For those looking to advertise with?Facebook, the online social giant leverages?its more than 1 billion users, saying,??We?ll help you reach the right ones.??But what does that mean? Every piece?of information shared on Facebook says?something about a user. Individually,?those pieces of information aren?t much,?but together they tell a very complete?story about each user?s personal life,?education and work experience, likes and?hobbies, and much more. By targeting a?group based on location, age and likes,?marketers can reach a very specific segment?of their target audience and one?that is likely to be receptive to the message?being communicated.

Facebook?s primary source of revenue?is advertising. By selecting key?words and personal information shared by each user ? such as relationship?status, location, employment, likes and activities ? businesses?can run ads targeting a selected subset of users. A February?2012 article on the New York Times opinion page stated that?Facebook earned $3.2 billion in advertising revenue in 2011,?which makes up 85 percent of its total revenue.

The same article noted Google?s use of personal data for?advertising and its resulting $36.5 billion in advertising revenue?in 2011. By simply ?analyzing what people sent ?over Gmail and?what they searched on the Web,? Google obtains a mass of data?and information to sell ads, markedly more information than even?Facebook, given that Google is one of the most popular search?engines used today.

A Right to Privacy

According to Porter, ?There is a balance that consumers need?to accept between privacy and free services as a part of the economic?exchange.? As consumers, your buying habits and purchases?provide information about you, and retailers would be foolish to?ignore this information, but at what point does it cross the line??To that end, Sheppeck raised several interesting questions:??How much data is too much? Where should companies draw the?line when it comes to mining for customer information? If privacy?is the number one concern, at what point is an individual?s privacy?breeched??

Additionally, Sheppeck added, the mere act of tracking and?storing personal data puts that data at risk and, therefore, puts?individual privacy at risk. If the practice of mining?personal information is to continue with?little or no legislation regulating it there must?be safeguards in place to protect said data. While?breeches of security are to be expected, consumers?expect that personal information will be protected?in addition to being leveraged.

What the Future Holds

With far more questions than answers, this?issue is just starting to heat up. As users of social?media start at a younger age and people become?more conscious of how their personal information?is being used, as well as how it impacts?their online reputation and subsequent ability?to get a job, the legal ramifications will start?coming to light. ?Right now, the economy is?our primary concern. As the economy improves?or at least stabilizes, issues regarding user privacy?and how personal information is managed?will find their way into the courtroom, and the?resulting legislation will better safeguard the personal data being?shared online,? Sheppeck said. ?In the near future, we will need?a federal standard that articulates data areas that are off limits.?

Until then, users must be vigilant about what they do and?don?t share online. It often is forgotten that the Internet lives on.?You may delete a post or picture, but ?somewhere, on some far?distant server, there is a record of you at last year?s office party?with a lampshade on your head.

Read more from B. Magazine.

Source: http://www.stthomas.edu/news/2013/04/23/to-share-or-not-to-share/

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