Facebook Careers Postings: Mobile Apps Analyst, Legal, Tokyo, Recruiting and More

Facebook added openings for several mobile-related jobs, a few counsel or attorney positions, an engineering spot in Tokyo, data center jobs, recruiting positions, as well as sales and account management openings this week. This is all according to the company’s Careers Page and its LinkedIn feed.

It is notably looking for a mobile apps analyst, which could be for covering the company’s own mobile apps, or could have something to do with an upcoming mobile app platform launch.

Posts added this week on Facebook’s Careers Page:

  • Mobile Apps Analyst
  • International Counsel (Dublin)
  • Product Counsel
  • Head of BI Engineering
  • Strategist, Market Solutions – Mobile (New York)
  • Software Engineer (Tokyo)
  • Developer Tools Designer
  • Data Center Site Coordinator (NC)
  • Manager, Site Services
  • Developer Tools Designer
  • DSO Account Manager (Melbourne)
  • International Account Manager (London)
  • Client Partner (Palo Alto)
  • Client Partner, Media (Austin)
  • Client Partner, Media (Menlo Park)
  • Account Manager, Online Sales Operations (Singapore)
  • Acquisition Marketing Associate (Palo Alto)
  • Online Marketing Associate – SMB (Palo Alto)
  • Analyst, Pricing and Yield (New York)
  • People Analytics Manager
  • University Recruiter, Creative (Product Design, User Experience)
  • University Recruiting and Sourcing Specialist – Dublin
  • University Recruiting and Sourcing Specialist – Contract (Dublin)

Jobs posted by Facebook on LinkedIn:

Who else is hiring? The Inside Network Job Board presents a survey of current openings at leading companies in the industry.

Facebook Hires and Departures: Analysts, Engineers, Communications, Client Partners and More

From the looks of its Careers Page and posts LinkedIn it would appear that Facebook hired a few engineering interns, communications staff, client partners, sales and marketing staff this week.

New hires per LinkedIn and Other Sources:

  • Nasser Alsherif, Analyst – formerly a research assistant at American University in Cairo, Egypt.
  • Wim Leers, Software Engineer Intern, Site Speed Team – formerly a volunteer at TEDxFlanders, webmaster at TTK Herckenrode VZW.
  • Jan Kassens, Software Engineer Intern – formerly a student.
  • Jenn Bouchard, Corporate Communications – formerly the manager of programs at the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy.
  • Vanessa Bakewell, Client Partner (Retail) – formerly an Industry Manager at Google.
  • Jordan MacDonald, Recruiting Coordinator – formerly a publicity and promotions intern at Allied Integrated Marketing.
  • Michael Kirkland, Communications Manager – formerly Director at Cutline Communications.

Prior listings now removed from the Facebook Careers Page:

  • Analyst, Pricing and Yield (New York)
  • Manager, Human Resources (Hyderabad)
  • University Programs Lead
  • Director of Policy (Central and Eastern Europe)
  • Manager, Public Policy (Washington, D.C.)
  • Operations Asset Analyst
  • Client Partner (Melbourne)
  • Client Partner (Sydney)
  • Client Partner, National Sales (Austin)
  • Client Partner, National Sales (Palo Alto)
  • Manager, National Sales (Palo Alto)
  • Sales Manager, EMEA Global Marketing Solutions (Dublin)
  • Client Partner – French (Dublin)
  • Client Partner – Italian (Dublin)
  • Manager, Online Sales Operations (Dublin)
  • Commerce Manager (Palo Alto)
  • User Operations Manager, Global Outsourcing
  • Head of Retail/QSR, Global Vertical Marketing
  • Head of Telco, Global Vertical Marketing
  • Product Marketing Manager, Brand Advertising
  • Strategist, Market Solutions – Auto (Chicago)
  • Strategist, Market Solutions (Autos) (Detroit)
  • Strategist, Market Solutions (Retail) (Chicago)

Who else is hiring? The Inside Network Job Board presents a survey of current openings at leading companies in the industry.

“View Shares” Link Shows Who Has Reposted Any Facebook News Feed Story

Facebook users are seeing a new “View Shares” link beneath news feed stories by friends, Pages, and those they subscribe to. When clicked, it opens a popover window displaying who has reposted that story and any additional context they added. Users will only see shares visible to them, meaning any post published publicly or by one of their friends.

View Shares constitutes the third news feed story feedback metric visible to users, joining Likes and comments. It indicates what news feed stories are most popular and that users might therefore want to read, click through, or repost themselves. The link’s presence could help alert users to the availability of the Share option and increase its usage. It will help Page admins who previously had no way of telling how frequently their updates were reposted other than searching for public updates. View Shares might also push content publishers to more directly encourage their readers to share their posts.

The feature now appears on posts by both users and Pages. In the popover revealed by the View Shares link, reposts where users added an optional description display that text, while those without additional context read “Name shared a page: [Page name]“. The feature respects privacy, as only users who could already view a repost will see it in the View Shares pop over.

Users have long had the “Share” option to repost the news feed stories they see, but data about the quantity of reposts was never displayed on the original story. Likes and comments both benefit from having the volumes of these feedback types displayed on posts. Now the Share link has the same expanded presence, which may serve to remind users about the option.

Somewhat oddly, the volume of Shares of a Page’s posts is not included in a Page’s Insights. Admins can now find this data by viewing their Page’s own posts, and the data will also probably be added to Insights in the near future.

While reposts previously helped publishers gain a burst of additional impressions, they didn’t provide a social recommendation for the original story to its viewers the way Likes and comments do. Those feedback types can help improve a post or publisher’s EdgeRank, or prominence in the news feed, but they usually don’t expose the post to a user’s own network.

The View Shares feature means Shares will give posts both immediate exposure to a user’s friends and a permanent recommendation. Since there are more benefits to Shares for publishers, they may want to increase the frequency with which they ask users to Share their posts.

Page admins might not be entirely happy about the change, though, as now when a user Shares one of their posts, it doesn’t include a “via [Page name] link back to the Page that originally posted the story. This means Shares no longer offer Pages an opportunity to gain new fans. Update 9/23/2011: Facebook has returned the “via [Page name]” to Shared posts. This means Page’s can gain new fans from having their posts Shared.

[Thanks to Dan Birdwhistell, Jesse Ferrell, Brittany Darwell, and Amit Lavi for all sending in tips]

Facebook’s Subscribe Button to Come With Personalized “Suggested User” Subscription Recommendations

Facebook will be adding a personalized recommendation feature to the Subscribe button that it launched earlier today, helping users find interesting non-friends to receive public updates from. Similar to friend suggestions that are based on who users have mutual friends with, Facebook Director of Product Naomi Gleit tells us the “People to Subscribe to” sidebar module will base subscription recommendations on who a user’s friends subscribe to.

[Update: The "People to Subscribe to" sidebar module is now live. It displays subscription suggestions along with friends who've subscribed to someone, or where the suggested user works.]

In addition to this forthcoming feature, Facebook has implemented several other ways for users to discover people to subscribe to. The news feed now displays stories about the new subscriptions of friends, the friendship panel on the right side of the profile displays friends who subscribe to someone, and Subscriber and Subscription tabs on profiles provide lists of people users might want receive updates from.

These personalized recommendations contrast with Twitter’s original king-making “Suggested User” list that provided new registrants with recommendations of people to follow from a limited list. That feature was criticized for causing certain celebrities and friends of Twitter employees to rapidly gain tens of thousands of followers. Instead, Facebook’s subscription recommendations will promote authors who publish updates especially relevant to a user and their network.

As the Subscribe feature just launched, most users currently have no subscriptions or subscribers. However, once some of a user’s friends have organically discovered authors to Subscribe to, Facebook will begin asking users if they also want to follow those authors.

Gleit explains that the recommendations will be “fairly algorithmic. The Subscribe recommendations engine will mainly show people your friends are subscribing to.” Facebook’s “Subscribe for Public Figures” .PDF document details that the feature will come in the form of a sidebar module users see while browsing the site, similar to the People You May Know module for friend suggestions.

Facebook does have some features in place to assist with subscription discovery. Activity stories are posted on a user’s wall and to the news feeds of their friends when they Subscribe to new people. This provides viral exposure for those receiving subscriptions.

When users visit the profile on a non-friend, they’ll see if any of their friends have subscribed to that person. This information appears in the friendship panel on the right side of the profile that usually displays mutual friends Likes.


Users can also visit Subscriptions and Subscribers tabs in the profile’s left navigation menu. If a user has a friend who’s opinion that trust, they could go through the Subscriptions tab and begin following all the people that friend has subscribed to.

Facebook is using the fact that assymetrical following isn’t its primary feature to help it improve on Twitter’s blunder. Most users will have forged friendships before they start subscribing to people, giving Facebook the data necessary to power a personalized subscription recommendation engine rather than blindly suggesting the same authors to everyone.

New This Week on the Inside Network Job Board: JibJab, King.com, TBG Digital, TinyCo and More

The Inside Network Job Board is dedicated to providing you with the best job opportunities across social and mobile application platforms.

Here are this week’s highlights from the Inside Network Job Board, including positions at JibJab MediaKing.com, Storm8, TBG Digital, Nubee, A Bit Lucky, TinyCo, Wild Needle Games, and 5th Planet Games.

Listings on the Inside Network Job Board are distributed to readers of Inside Social Games, Inside Facebook and Inside Mobile Apps through regular posts and widgets on the sites. Your open positions are being seen by the leading developers, product managers, marketers, designers, and executives in the Facebook Platform and social gaming industry today.

Facebook Social Ads Are Not a Test: They Appear on a Majority of the Site’s Page Views

Facebook’s social ads are no longer a test for Facebook — a majority of Facebook page views display a social or Sponsored Story ad, said Gokul Rajaram, Facebook’s Product Director of Ads at today’s TechCrunch Disrupt conference. He also notes that including social information in Facebook ads leads to a 68% increase in ad recall and a four times higher likelihood of buying a product compared to traditional Facebook display ads.

Rajaram explains that “no one wants to receive a message from a brand” — instead, social ads let users “view a brand message through the prism of their friends”. In this way, users become customers not just because of a brand’s ads, but because people they trust support those brands.

Rajaram also discussed how brands advertising for their Facebook Pages earn additional conversions on top of those they directly pay for thanks to the news feed. When users see an ad for a Page and Like it, it publishes a news feed story that their friends see. These friends take the story as an implicit social recommendation and go on to Like the Page themselves. He cited a brand that gained tens of thousands of unpaid Likes as a result of a paid campaign.

Social ads are a core advantage of Facebook over other ad-supported websites. By leveraging the connections and actions of its users, it is able to provide advertisers a way of amplifying the word of mouth known to convince consumers. Without a dense social graph to build on, ads on other websites are less compelling. If Facebook brought this social ad experience out of the site’s chrome and let publishers embed it on their website through an Open Graph ad unit, it could create a significant new revenue stream.

Facebook’s New Subscribe Button Allows Assymetrical Following of Non-Friends’ Public Updates

Facebook today launches the Subscribe button – an option for users to receive the publicly visible updates published by non-friends. Similar to Twitter, this assymetrical following (sometimes known as asynchronous) capability will expand the types of relationships users can have on Facebook beyond friendship, allowing users to conveniently view content in news feed from people they don’t know but are interested in.

The Subscribe button also appears on the profile of friends, and gives users options to control the volume and types of updates they see from someone in their news feed. This will allow users to select to only receive or hide from their news feed a friend’s major life events, status updates, photos and videos, and games content. This last option could help serious gamers hide all non-game content from people they met while playing but aren’t friends with. However, it will also allow users to shun games content published by friends, which could hurt growth rates for games and applications.

Until today, there were only two types of relationships one could have on Facebook: symmetrical friendship where both users confirmed they wanted to see each other’s content in the news feed, and Liking of Pages where one user chose to see updates in the news feed from a public entity such as a business. Many thought Facebook would have already launched such a feature. However, the company appears to finally be ready to expand its scope after implementing an increase in the transparency and ease of publishing to specific audiences including the public.

Assymetrical Following Through the Subscribe Button

Now, users will have the ability to opt in allowing subscribers. This places a Subscribe button on their profile which non-friends can click to begin viewing the updates they publish with the privacy setting of public. The user being subscribed to doesn’t have to confirm each connection, and won’t see content of their subscribers in the news feed.

Technically, the Subscribe button just makes consumption of public updates more convenient and its opt in, so there aren’t any serious privacy concerns. Someone could already visit the profile of a non-friend and see their public updates, but now they’ll be sent them through the news feed. Those opting into subscriptions can select to allow or disallow comments by subscribers, and activate notifications about gaining new subscribers.

Assymetrical following will create a middle ground between personal profiles for private updating and Facebook Pages that are totally public. If a user has opted in to allowing subscriptions and they reject a friend request from someone, that person will automatically become a subscriber. The option should be especially helpful to self-promoters who’ve hit Facebook’s 5,000 friend limit. If users amass a subscriber base and later want to become a Page with update targeting, applications, and analytics, Facebook has confirmed that they’ll be able to convert their subscribers into Likes.

The Subscribe button puts Facebook in direct competition with Twitter, as well as Google+, which are both built around assymetrical following. Journalists, thought leaders, celebrities, or anyone who chooses to publish publicly will be able to amass a subscriber base, gain more impressions for their posted content, and engage with strangers by tapping into Facebook’s enormous user base and familiar discussion tools. Facebook’s Director of Product Naomi Gleit tells us “We want you to be able to broaden your conversations — comment and interact with people who are outside of your friend circle.”

Refining the News Feed Presence of Friends

If users are already friends with someone, they’ll see a Subscribe button on their profile with a drop-down allowing them to receive all, most, or only important updates by that person in the news feed, as well as select the types of stories they see. Previously, the only way users could influence the presence of a friend in the news feed was to completely hide all their updates. Now they can see more or less of them using the new Close Friends and Acquaintances Friend Lists, or by using the Subscribe button.

These new options will add user preference to Facebook’s EdgeRank algorithm for determining what’s relevant to surface in the news feed. Users will no longer have to suffer the annoying stories about high scores or new items earned by their little brother in social games. Another example Gleit cited was that if a user has an acquaintance who is a great photographer, they can select to just see their photo updates, not status updates about their daily lives.

Users will no longer have to use multiple services in order to handle different relationships such as those based on real-life friendship, interests, or acquaintanceship. Twitter may have already built up a graph of 100 million people based on connections, but Facebook could bring the knowledge accessible through assymetrical following to the mainstream while improving the quality of the news feed.

Horoscopes, Spotify, Dating, Tabs, Videos, Bing and Yahoo on This Week’s Top 20 Growing Facebook Apps by DAU

Horoscopes, as well as Spotify, a few dating applications, Page tabs, video apps, photos, Bing and Yahoo were on our list of growing apps by daily active users this week. The titles on our list below grew from between 94,900 and 4.4 million DAU, based on AppData, our data tracking service covering traffic growth for apps on Facebook.

Top Gainers This Week

Name DAU Gain Gain,%
1.  Daily Horoscope 8,120,362 +4,479,632 +123%
2.  The Sims Social 10,675,264 +2,863,686 +37%
3.  Spotify 2,284,692 +1,059,346 +86%
4.  Onedate 643,417 +520,847 +425%
5.  الأبراج اليومية 1,265,852 +512,024 +68%
6.  Zuma Blitz 1,126,642 +477,563 +74%
7.  TopFace 488,364 +342,674 +235%
8.  Niik 365,114 +232,249 +175%
9.  Welcome Tab 675,302 +176,769 +35%
10.  werevertumorro 153,678 +145,293 +1,733%
11.  Social Empires 730,286 +138,006 +23%
12.  Divx Video 135,039 +134,516 +25,720%
13.  Ninja Saga 1,091,485 +127,774 +13%
14.  picplz 157,605 +119,039 +309%
15.  Tetris Battle 1,425,941 +118,946 +9%
16.  Bing 3,545,737 +115,976 +3%
17.  The Pokerist club — Texas Poker 257,549 +114,349 +80%
18.  Static Iframe Tab 598,040 +99,626 +20%
19.  Yahoo! 11,885,623 +96,049 +0.81%
20.  My Tab 383,243 +94,898 +33%

Daily Horoscope grew by 4.4 million DAU in the United States, Mexico and Italy while the Arabic version, الأبراج اليومية, grew by 512,000 DAU this week. These apps usually grow by asking users to invite their friends, as well as posting to the feed regularly. Then the music service Spotify grew by 2.2 million DAU this week mostly in the US and the United Kingdom.

Dating apps also made our list this week, although not the typically popular ones. Onedate grew in Italy and France by 520,900 DAU, TopFace grew by 342,700 DAU and Niik by 232,300 MAU in the US. these apps seemed to use photos to leverage peoples’ interest in each other. Page tab apps on our list this week included Welcome Tab with 176,800 DAU, Static Iframe Tab with 99,600 DAU and My Tab with 94,900 DAU.

Video apps on our list this week included werevertumorro, which grew almost entirely in Mexico by 145,300 DAU, and is basically a video network. Then Divx Video grew by 134,500 DAU and is a Turkish video app. Picplz is an app that helps users share photos via Connect and grew by 119,000 DAU. Then Bing grew by 116,000 DAU and Yahoo grew by 96,000 DAU.

All data in this post comes from our traffic tracking service, AppData. Stay tuned for our look at the top emerging apps on Friday.

At f8, Facebook Developers Could Get a Smarter Way to Structure Their News Feed Stories

While Facebook product launches tend to get the most speculation before the f8 developer conference  – there are 750 million users who care, after all — the company has often used the event to push grand presentations that instead target developers.

That trend may be the case again next Thursday, we’re hearing from a trusted source with some knowledge of what the company has planned.

Developers might be getting new access to Facebook’s news feed, building off of the graph API that Facebook presented at last year’s f8. They’d be able to provide new structure to the information they share into the news feed, allowing Facebook’s news feed algorithm to present it to the audience most likely to find it relevant and engage with it.

Update: Facebook spokesman Jonny Thaw has also confirmed with us that “Yes, there will be platform integration” for Smart Lists. This includes the ability for developers that have been granted access to a user’s Friend Lists to publish content specifically to members of Smart Lists.

The goal is to help developers focus on sharing what’s right for users (not just their own traffic and revenue numbers), while giving the users themselves a more subtle and serendipitous experience.

With a more structured input of information, Facebook could then match content to users who’ve previously enjoyed similar content. It could also measure which developers are producing the most beloved content, based on factors like users resharing or hiding the story, and reward the developer with more visibility for their stories. That would create a more virtuous cycle where high-quality developers become more prominent, inspiring more user engagement that benefits both developers and Facebook, the company no doubt hopes.

Structured Content for Enhanced Relevancy

To understand what the changes mean, one example might be the well-understood problem of social game spam. Say a user achieves a new high score in Scrabble, an event that’s exceptional enough that they want all of their friends to know about, not just their Scrabble-playing companions. A developer could structure the story about the high score to signal to Facebook that it is of more general interest to all of a user’s friends, or maybe just the larger subgroup of friends who have played some social games on Facebook, but have not installed Scrabble.

In another situation, a local business discovery app could structure the content shared by its users such that Facebook knows its more relevant to local users. The content would then appear more prominently in the news feed to those living in the same city as the user posting it.

This isn’t just about games and apps. The change would impact anyone sharing any information to Facebook, including all of the sites that have installed the Facebook Like button and other plugins since they launched at f8 last year, or integrated with Facebook Connect (in total, Facebook’s official stats say that more than 2.5 million sites have integrated it so far).

Developers can already ask users permission to access their Friend Lists, but since they’re unique to each user, it’s difficult to know what type of audience corresponds to what list. With platform integration for Smart Lists and special lists, which Facebook confirms with us will be available in a few days, developers will be able to ask permission to target updates published by users through their apps to local friends, classmates, coworkers, family, Close friends, and Acquaintances.

Currently, the Graph API allows developers to provide a variety of more straightforward meta data about the content they publish, like the title of the info they’re sharing, a blurb, etc. But Facebook has used other signals in its news feed algorithm to figure out what to share and with whom, such as who a user’s closest friends are based on photo tags and who’s Liked a user’s previous posts.

The Context Is Right for This Launch

In the past, Facebook has taken blunter measures to fight spam, with methods such as clumping all stories from specific applications into a single thread, and hiding most stories about social games from friends who have not installed the app.

It has also taken a still-changing approach to how users make the news feed work for them. It has constantly iterated on the news feed algorithm since bringing it back a few years ago, and tested features that ask users how often they want to discover new games, or what types of content they prefer to see in the feed.

Just today, it officially launched a variety of Smart Lists and special lists – automatically created and populated lists of a user’s local friends, coworkers, and those that share other characteristics, and lists of best friends and distant contacts whose members appear more or less in the standard view of a user’s news feed. It’s probably not a coincidence that this particular launch is coming now. Users can apply the Friends Lists as news feed filters, but Facebook could allow developers target some stories to these lists as well. For example, the Scrabble high-score story could be formatted to be shared with the “Acquaintances” list, while less monumental stories would be formatted to just appear for “close friends.” That example is, to be clear, just a guess based on what our source has said.

Thinking more long-term, Facebook has steadily laid the foundation for this move over the years. The first f8, in 2007, was where the app platform was unveiled. Facebook Connect came in 2008, which started Facebook’s reach outside of the site by helping people to log in using their Facebook identities. The Graph API came at its next conference, last year. In addition to the consumer-facing social plugins and instant personalization, the company created the Open Graph protocol system for assigning web pages meta data that improves the format of news feed stories shared from them. The plugins utilizing this meta data pushed Facebook across the web. All that effort on the part of Facebook and its growing ecosystem now makes this change a natural progression.

In this context, the other big and interesting things that Facebook is rumored to be launching — a music platform that might include a scrobbling tool, a mobile web development platform, an iPad app — are more pieces of the puzzle that Facebook has been putting together. That is, making anything, from a catchy song to a popular mobile game, get the exposure it deserves to the users who want it.

The move would also aid Facebook against long-time competitor for owning and distributing the world’s information: Google. The launch of better methods for sharing quality information into Facebook could help it improve its news feed and box out Google, which is trying to move its new social alternative Google+ to the mainstream. Last year was about Facebook pushing itself out to the world via plugins, this year could be about pulling more of the world into Facebook.

Want to join us for some casual drinks, rumor and speculation the night before f8, come to the Inside Network happy hour next Wednesday at Mercury Lounge in SF. RSVP here to get a free drink on us.

Josh Constine co-authored this article.

Facebook Officially Launches Smart Lists, and Special Friend Lists That Influence the News Feed

Facebook today officially launches several improvements to its Friend Lists feature that can be used to define privacy settings and filter the news feed, including some changes that leaked last week. As we covered in depth then, users now have automatically created, populated and updated Smart Lists of their family, co-workers, classmates, and local friends. Additionally, users can now add friends to an “Acquaintances” list whose members will appear less frequently in the news feed, and a “Close Friends” list of people who will appear more frequently in news feed and whose updates will trigger notifications.

By building or starting these lists for users, Facebook may be able increase adoption of the Friend Lists feature, leading users to control their privacy more nimbly, increase the relevance of their news feeds, and share a wider range of content with more specific audiences. However, a lack of granular control of Close Friends’ opt out notifications may push users to quickly turn them off or forgo adding friends to the special list, and the fact that members of lists are revealed when users publish to them might scare users away from the feature.

We recapped the history of the four year old Friend Lists feature last week, describing how they’ve never been widely used due to the chore of making them and their buried place in the interface. Their potential to get users to publish content more often but to fewer people is important to the long-term health of Facebook and its ability to fend off competitors focused on micro-sharing such as Google+.

The addition of characteristic-based Friend Lists could get users to share more personal, professional and local content with relevant audiences, rather than spam friends on the other side of the country about making dinner plans, or offend co-workers or family with racier photos and jokes.

Bookmarks, Smart Lists, and Special Lists

With today’s update, manually created Friend Lists, Smart Lists, and the special lists are now easily accessible from bookmarks in the site’s left sidebar. When clicked, they filter the news feed to only show updates from their members. More, fewer, or no bookmarks will appear depending on user’s engagement with the feature. Users will also be able to easily publish a post to one or more Friend Lists, as they’re now included in the new audience drop-down of the news feed publisher.

Facebook’s Director of Product Blake Ross tells us their old location “was not discoverable” and that the bookmark system will make Friend Lists optional for those who want them without “fundamentally changing the behavior” of those who don’t.

The Smart Lists are populated based on information explicitly included in the profiles of friends. Users will have one list of family members, one for each of their work places, one for each of their schools and colleges, and a local friends list of those living within 10 miles of their current city. Users can customize the mile radius of the local friends Smart List using a slick map feature to include friends in nearby cities.

Mimicking some of the most frequently manually created Friend Lists, Facebook now creates Acquaintances and Close Friends lists by default, but doesn’t auto-populate them. Those added to the former, like distant friends and old colleagues, will only have their most important content, such as marriages and moves, appear in a user’s news feed. Those in the Close Friends list will have more of their content appear in a user’s news feed, and each update they post will trigger Facebook and optional email notifications.

Users can manually add or remove members to any of their lists, and Facebook is making this editing process easier too. With a very similar design to Google+, user profiles now display a button allowing for instant admission into a list, rather than forcing users to go back to the Friend List editor. Users can even preemptively assign a potential friend to lists while they await a response to their friend request. Suggestions for people to add to a list, based on their similarities with existing members, will now appear beside the news feed when that list is applied as a feed filter.

Notification Overload and Privacy Concerns

As we saw when Facebook temporarily made game requests trigger notifications, those about other users can drown out more pressing notifications about posts to a user’s wall or photo tags. Ross tells us Close Friends is designed for users with fewer friends, but the site’s early tests showed they aren’t annoying for those with large, active networks. Still, those who don’t want a big influx of notifications may have to choose whether to simply turn them off or not get the full value out of the list’s ability to influence the news feed by only adding a very small number of friends.

One significant privacy issue is that when users see a post in the news feed because they’re a member of a Friend List published to by a friend, they can see who else is included in that list. Ross explains that this lets users know how public any comments they leave on the post will be, and that users won’t see the name of the list. Still, Friend Lists and their members have always been private unless explicitly featured in a user’s profile, and being forced to reveal their members might make users weary of publishing to them.

Ross tells us with time Facebook may add more types of Smart Lists, but only ones based on explicitly stated profile information. The changes to Friend Lists, which will roll out soon, have the potential to bring on a new era of micro-sharing on Facebook if the site can learn how users want to apply them. To help it improve the feature and quiet claims that it doesn’t listen to its users, Facebook is encouraging people to leave feedback on a newly created “Facebook Lists Team” Facebook Page.

Inside Facebook Sponsors
Votigo Shoutlet Nanigans maudau GREE Frima LifeStreet
Featured Company
Jobs of the Day

GOOD/Corps
Los Angeles, CA

Creative Circle
Los Angeles, CA

MTV K
New York, NY

More Research & Information from Inside Facebook

Sign up for free email updates beyond today's news.

 

WebMediaBrands
Mediabistro | All Creative World | Inside Network
Jobs | Education | Research | Events | News
Advertise | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Copyright 2012 WebMediaBrands Inc. All rights reserved.