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Despite the widespread adoption of social applications (social networking, file sharing, instant messaging, and blogs, to name only the most well-known) creating applications that foster social interaction is hard.
It is altogether too easy to approach application development from an information management mindset and miss the greater social context: people interacting to accomplish personal aims, exploring their identity through social groups, and working in online marketplaces.
It is these three contexts - personal, group, and market - that form three complementary and distinct tiers of social applications. Users may opt to use an application for very personal reasons - signing up for a web filing sharing service to transfer a file to a colleague - but they become consistent users, and invite others to use the application, because of the social dimension: how well does the application support the users’ needs for social integration?
Effective social applications bring people into the foreground by making the social dimension intuitive and natural, and integrating information flow into the social. Information architecture must take a back seat to social architecture.
This workshop explores the principles of successful social applications, and presents a Social Architecture approach to model new - or remodel existing - applications. Examples of well-designed and successful social applications - including Flickr, Last.fm, Facebook, and Upcoming.org - are explored in the search for general characteristics and recurring design motifs. A number of badly designed sites are contrasted with "well-socialized" alternatives.
The workshop includes two group activities to explore the application of the approach in small team settings.
Well, I promptly subscribed to Message's RSS feed!
Jan Algoed