ExperienceCurve

7 Building Blocks Of The Social Web

In a brilliant post on nform.ca, information architect Gene Smith of the Atomiq.org blog outlined the 7 building blocks of social software. This pulls together the work of various people including Matt Webb and Stewart Butterfield and provides a framework that I think is valuable in thinking about social software.

The 7 building blocks are:

  • Identity – a way of uniquely identifying people in the system
  • Presence – a way of knowing who is online, available or otherwise nearby
  • Relationships – a way of describing how two users in the system are related (e.g. in Flickr, people can be contacts, friends of family)
  • Conversations – a way of talking to other people through the system
  • Groups – a way of forming communities of interest
  • Reputation – a way of knowing the status of other people in the system (who’s a good citizen? who can be trusted?)
  • Sharing – a way of sharing things that are meaningful to participants (like photos or videos)

The article also presents a graphic demonstrating how social media sites have different emphasis, and act in different ways.

Social Software Honeycomb

One aspect that I think is maybe missing from this model is the concept of equity, maybe social equity but that might be redundant. I think potentially reputation may accounts for some of the equity participants build in these social networks, but it doesn’t quite cover some of the key motivations in social networks. Think about yelp or myspace, the way you build equity in those networks is through collecting, collecting friends on myspace, collecting reviews and friends on yelp (sure reviews are contributions and they are part of your reputation). I think the way people build equity and reputation in social networks is what makes a community sustainable, it’s almost the equivalent to the concept of corporate culture or “the way we do things around here”. Analysis of corporate culture may provide a nice parallel when thinking about social networks and communities. Believe it or not the analysis of corporate culture is not as dry as it sounds and involves, heros, myths, stories, norms, and values.

I don’t know about you but i’ve worked at companies that believed they could “create culture” by telling the right stories, providing hero figures, instilling values etc. There are some that would say creating culture is not possible, but possibly you can influence it. Is Tom a heroic figure of myspace? Brookers on youtube? Nish on Yelp? Is the elite badge on yelp a symbol that is creating culture?

Culture 1 01

Here’s some reading on culture

  • http://blogs.chinesetattoosblog.info/7-building-blocks-of-the-social-web/ » 7 Building Blocks Of The Social Web

    [...] unknown wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptThis pulls together the work of various people including Matt Webb and Stewart Butterfield and provides a framework that I think is valuable in thinking about social software. The 7 building blocks are: … [...]

  • http://www.theinfonaut.com Jennifer Fader

    Thanks for this post – the model leaves out paticipation and its drivers. Are we naturally wired to participate once the stage has been set?

  • http://www.scottweisbrod.com/index.php/?p=270 Weekly Linkage [04-13-07] at Experience Planner by Scott Weisbrod

    [...] 7 Building Blocks Of The Social Web (ExperienceCurve) [...]

  • admin

    Good question Jennifer, I always think motivation is an important aspect to think about, and I often think that comes from the reward/feedback system a social network might have. Rewards might be explicit, like the yelp elite badge, or they might be socially agreed upon norms, or expectations of participation.

  • http://harbour7.co.uk/2007/04/14/links-for-2007-04-14/ links for 2007-04-14 « harbour 7

    [...] 7 Building Blocks Of The Social Web at ExperienceCurve (tags: social+media webdev tech think community) [...]

  • http://www.samiviitamaki.com/2008/02/04/traxmeet-takes-social-sports-to-a-new-level/ Traxmeet takes Social Sports to a New Level

    [...] sharing the results and comparing them. Because of this I would like to pose a question: should the 7 building blocks of the social web be expanded to 8 building blocks, with comparing as the 8th one? Of course this is broadly covered [...]

  • http://www.samiviitamaki.com sami viitamäki

    I started thinking when blogging about a social sports service here in Finland: should the 7 building blocks be expanded with an 8th one – competing. I mean, this is the very focus of interaction in many modern crowdsourcing oriented communities and services, where people submit their individual contributions to see who has the best one. Of course, this can be included in reputation, reputation, but reputation is a lerger concept in the 7 building blocks than mere rating of one’s contributions…

  • http://adjustafresh.com Scott

    Karl – good post. I hear where you’re coming from with respect to “Equity;” it’s an important intangible within the community. I don’t have the answer, but the following three ideas popped into my head:

    1. Equity = Identity
    2. Equity = Reputation
    3. Equity is the sum total of all seven facets