3 Social Media Networks Before Facebook
Before Facebook (FB) became popular, there were a number of social networking sites that captured the attention of users, at least for a time. Lack of strategic planning, poor timing, or just plain bad luck contributed to the failure of these social media sites to achieve staying power. Three, in particular, remain in memory as fantastic upstarts that existed before Facebook came along and swept them all away as the dominant player in social media In this article, we'll discuss what made Friendster, Myspace, and Second Life popular, and what eventually happened to each site.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Before Facebook became a dominant social media site, a variety of social networking sites briefly captured the public's attention.
- In 2003, Friendster was a premier social media site that at one time had three million monthly active users.
- Music-oriented social networking site, Myspace, was acquired by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp in 2005 in a deal valued at $580 million, one of the biggest purchases of an Internet company at the time.
- In 2008, Facebook overtook Myspace in popularity; News Corp sold Myspace in 2011 to Specific Media Group and Justin Timberlake for $35 million.
Friendster
At one point, Friendster was considered the premier social media site. Within just a few months of its launch, the company had more than three million monthly active users,In 2003, Friendster's founder, Jonathan Abrams, was offered $30 million by Google to purchase the site. Instead, Abrams chose to take on venture capital investment and try to grow the company.
The company ended up falling apart. It was unable to manage the pace of new subscribers. Web pages routinely didn't load on time or at all. And a site redesign didn't seem worth bothering about.
Friendster pretty much died in 2006, though with a strong following in some of the Asian markets it managed to survive a few more years. In 2011, it resurrected as a gaming site and remained live until 2015.
Research published by Cornell University says the main reason for Friendster's demise is that even though the site had millions of users in 2009, the links were not resilient enough between the networks people created to sustain their connection.
Myspace
Myspace burst onto the scene in 2003 when co-founders Tom Anderson and Chris DeWolfe and their friends—who were all employed by eUniverse (later Intermix Media, Inc.)—essentially copied Friendster's model but left out the features they didn't like or feel were necessary. Myspace focused on sound infrastructure and scalability It became a place for users to build a personal community and house personal profiles, blogs, groups, photos, music, and videos.
In 2005, Rupert Murdoch's News Corp bought Intermix Media, which owned Myspace, for $580 million. By that time, the social network had more than 16 million monthly users. At one point under News Corp, the website was valued at a whopping $12 billion.
But, post-2007, Myspace experienced a fall from grace in the social media space losing millions of users monthly to the rising site Facebook. Some reasons that have been discussed widely were an oversaturation of advertising, slow load times, and a loss of innovation where features were concerned.
News Corp sold Myspace to Specific Media Group for $35 million. Notably, entertainer Justin Timberlake took an ownership stake in the company. The new Myspace was focused on music where users could access millions of musical tracks and videos. Myspace still exists today. Time, Inc. bought it from Viant (formerly Specific Media) in 2016.
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