Report: Facebook Is Most Hated Social Media Company

The company is so ubiquitous it has no incentive to "delight" users. Wikipedia 
topped the social media sites for customer satisfaction.

By Courtney Rubin | Jul 20, 2011

http://www.inc.com/news/articles/201107/facebook-scores-poorly-on-customer-satisfaction_Printer_Friendly.html

Facebook, the most visited site on the Internet, is also among the most hated, 
says a new research.

The report by the American Customer Satisfaction Index and customer experience 
analytics firm ForeSee Results measures customer satisfaction with social 
media, Internet search, and news companies. The report comes as Mark Zuckerberg 
hits television today to defend Facebook, and was conducted before the 
widespread introduction of Google+.

"Facebook is becoming the only game in town so there is no incentive to 
'delight' the user," said ACSI managing director David Van Amburg.

>From the report: "Customers have shown that, so far, they have been willing to 
>suffer through a poor user experience in order to enjoy the benefits Facebook 
>provides."

Facebook scored 64 on a 100-point scale, which puts the company in the bottom 
five percent of private sector companies and in the same range as airlines and 
cable companies, "two perennially low-scoring industries with terrible customer 
satisfaction," according to the results.

Other social media sites fared relatively well. Wikipedia topped the list with 
a score of 77.

"Wikipedia is more satisfying than most of the ACSI-measured news and 
information websites," wrote Claes Fornell, ACSI founder and a University of 
Michigan business professor. "Like Google, Wikipedia’s user interface has 
remained very consistent over the years, and its nonprofit standing means that 
it has not been impacted by commercialization and marketing unlike many other 
social media sites."

YouTube had a score of 73. MySpace had a score of 63—one point below Facebook.

Facebook "was the upstart to MySpace’s market leader just five years ago, but 
these roles now have been reversed," Fornell wrote. "Still, controversies over 
privacy issues, frequent changes to user interfaces, and increasing 
commercialization have positioned the big social networking sites at 
satisfaction levels well below other websites and similar to poor-performing 
industries like airlines and subscription TV service (both 66)."

Google was at the top of the search portals and the search engines industry 
with a score of 80 out of 100, although that is down from 86 last year.

Microsoft’s Bing search engine "makes a strong first showing with a score of 
77," according to the report. It was followed by Yahoo (76), AOL (74), and 
Ask.com (73).

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