Christian Post
 
June 16th,  2011
 
Is Facebook on the Decline?
 
_Inside Facebook released a  report_ 
(http://www.insidefacebook.com/2011/06/13/available-data-shows-facebook-user-numbers-growing-quickly-or-slowly-or-f
alling/)  Monday showing that while Facebook continues to grow  worldwide, 
it’s popularity in the U.S. and other “early adopter countries” may  be 
waning. 

Worldwide they say Facebook was up 5 million users in May, but their data  
shows U.S. users falling from 155.2 million in April to 149.4 million in 
May, a  whopping 6 million person decrease. Inside Facebook is careful to state 
that  these numbers come from Facebook’s ad tool and is not an official 
Facebook  report. They also go to great lengths in comparing their numbers to 
those of  companies like comScore and Compete. 
The slew of reports don’t all agree – some are up, some are down. It’s 
also  important to note that one month can always be an anomaly. It’s better to 
look  at the broader trend over many months. Looking over many months, 
though, it’s  clear that Facebook’s growth in the U.S. has slowed in 2011. 
Inside Facebook is also reporting declines in Facebook users in Britain,  
Norway, and Russia as well. 
My Take 
In my opinion, the newness of Facebook has definitely worn off for most  
people. It’s definitely not the shiny new toy it was a couple of years ago. I  
still check Facebook several times a day, but it’s not some place I hang 
out. I  scan updates for interesting links and meaningful updates from friends 
and  respond as quickly as I can. Get in, get out, move on. And I’m 
certainly  noticing more Facebook friends going days or weeks without posting 
any  
updates. 
While some people seem to think _Twitter is the new Facebook_ 
(http://articles.cnn.com/2011-06-10/tech/twitter.facebook.competition_1_twitter-ios-facebo
ok) , I  don’t see it. Twitter’s growth has slowed too, unless you count 
the millions of  phony, auto-posting spam accounts created every month. 
This is nothing out of the ordinary or unexpected, though. Every technology 
 reaches its saturation point where it runs out of room to grow. Personal  
Facebook use seems to have reached that point in the U.S. 
The area where I still see growth, though, is in churches, non-profits and  
businesses. Larger and more tech-savvy organizations have been using 
Facebook  (and Twitter) for a while now, but lots of smaller organizations and 
new 
 organizations are embracing social media every month. 
Your Take 
What are your observations from your own use of Facebook and that of your  
friends? Is Facebook losing some of its luster? If so, why do you think that 
is?  Are people moving to other social networks? Other online activities? 
Or  something else entirely?

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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