How Businesses Fare On Myspace

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MySpace’s notoriety is truly phenomenal. MySpace is familiar, literally, to people in every corner of the world. This level of recognition might seem to be something admirable or coveted. Further thought about things however might bring about a different perspective. Time and again famously popular brands have seen their appeal plummet back to earth. There’s a fine line in other words between popularity and overexposure. It seems that at some point, people just get plain tired of seeing or hearing about the same old thing.

MySpace at one time was a hang out for teens mostly, but since then MySpace has received every form of media coverage. The media came and told MySpace's story to millions of people throughout the world. This after all is the function of the media. The appearance of the media in MySpace land however may have given core MySpace users the impression that their territory had been intruded upon, and even sold out to mainstream interests.

The feeling of MySpace going corporate may have left a particularly significant impression on MySpace users. Burger King and WalMart, two big companies if there ever were any, once had profiles on MySpace. Both profiles have since been abandoned and at least in WalMarts case it appears their profile was removed as a direct result of generating bad publicity. It seems many MySpace users were not happy with WalMarts presence on MySpace, and expressed as much through harsh comments left on WalMarts MySpace profile. So the profile is now gone.

The WalMart scenario may have been a lesson not just that for that company, but for MySpace as well. MySpace has apparently been surpassed in popularity by Facebook, the networking site explicitly for students. Is this due to the general feeling that MySpace had become overrun and corrupted by commercial interests? Its certainly a valid possibility. Its worth noting that Facebook does display advertising, Facebook does not allow companies to actually create profiles: not yet anyway. Perhaps users of any online site have accepted seeing advertising, but not the notion of embracing advertisers as regular members of the community.

All of this isnt to suggest that MySpace is now somehow irrelevant: there are still hundreds of millions of MySpace profiles, and almost certainly millions and millions of MySpace members. But if there is something to be taken from the response to corporate presences on MySpace it may be that business sites should be presented with a light touch and without an obvious motivation to increase sales or to generate publicity. As with any other community, becoming an accepted part of MySpace takes time and a respectful effort.


About the Author:
Zinn Jeremiah is a freelance author. To read more of Zinn's writings, visit article exchange. For MySpace layout help, visit MySpace layouts.



Article Originally Published On: http://www.articlesnatch.com


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