Sun, Feb 26, 2012, 7:20 AM EST - U.S. Markets closed

Pew study: Facebook users get more than they give

Pew study finds Facebook users receive more warm fuzzies than they give

NEW YORK (AP) -- The goody-two-shoes among us say it's better to give than to receive. That's not true for the average Facebook user, though.

A new study out Friday found that the average user of the world's biggest online social network gets more than they give. That means more messages, more "likes" and more comments. Yes, even more "pokes."

Behind all that is Facebook's relatively small group of "power users," who do more than their share of tagging, liking and uploading. The report from the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project comes two days after Facebook filed for a $5 billion initial public offering of stock that could eventually value the company at $100 billion.

Key to that mammoth valuation will be Facebook's ability to convince advertisers they can make money from the billons of connections and interactions that people partake in on its website and beyond. Though Pew's findings don't address the commercial side of people's activities, they shed important light on how people use the site and what they get out of it.

The study is the product of Pew's analysis of Facebook users' activities in November 2010. It consisted of data that Facebook provided to Pew after 269 users gave their permission. Those users were identified through a random telephone survey about broader Internet issues.

The researchers found that about 20 percent to 30 percent of Facebook users fell into the "power user" category, though they tended to specialize in different types of activities on Facebook. Some of them sent a lot of friend requests, while others tagged more photos than the average user. Only 5 percent were power users in every activity that Pew logged.

The way this plays out is that the average user is more "liked" than they click "like" on other's posts. They receive more friend requests than they send. On average, 63 percent of Facebook users studied received friend requests in the survey month while only 40 percent made a friend request.

The result? It feels good to be on Facebook. It might even feel better than life off Facebook. After all, there's no dislike button, and friends are unlikely to post harsh comments on your page. Instead, people you might not have seen in years bombard you with positive affirmations day after day, year after year.

"You keep getting all these wonderful positive rewards," said Keith Hampton, the study's main author and a Rutgers University professor. "That's pretty hard to give up."

Getting more than you are giving, in terms of emotional support, "is kind of what you are looking for," he added.

This might be the lure of Facebook, the reason it could be worth $100 billion and the reason it has 845 million users who are not leaving even if they've been on the site for years. The study found no evidence of "Facebook fatigue," the idea that people get tired of Facebook after they've been on it for a long time.

In fact it was the opposite. The longer someone had been using Facebook, the more frequently they posted status updates, pressed "like" and commented on friends' content.

"For most people, the longer they are on Facebook, the more they do on Facebook," Hampton said.

The researchers also looked at poking, the weird, perhaps least-understood and easily joked-about activity on Facebook. They found that the "poke" button was among the least-practiced activities. Only 6 percent of users poked a friend, while 7 percent were poked during the month.

"While uncommon, some Facebook users are frequent pokers," the report says. "Five participants from our sample poked nearly once a day, being poked themselves a nearly equal number of times."

The original phone survey of 2,255 adults was done in October and November of 2010 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.3 percentage points. At the end of that survey, users were asked for consent for Facebook to share data. Twelve percent of the survey participants agreed.

 

43 comments

  • Satyr  •  23 days ago
    Power users? Huh. I had another name for them.
  • terrance  •  23 days ago
    If Facebook is supposedly worth 100 billion dollars then I quess pigs can really fly.
  • K  •  22 days ago
    facebook is so stupid. people on it have no life
  • jem  •  Santa Clara, California  •  23 days ago
    Really, I find it a waste of my time and cannot believe that some spend more time on FB than just being out there socializing face to face,not screen to screen...
  • Ron  •  23 days ago
    More free publicity for FB... I don't know if they get something to write positive articles about FB, or is it just "community" solidarity?

    Well, Zucker B. is not the first to sell personal data, but too many journalists participate in this huge and free marketing operation! You never saw so much free advertisment in mainstream media about Myspaces, which came before FB, for example!!? Zucker does the same as myspace, years later, and he gets all the merit!

    This FB thingy is one huge and well coordinated marketing campaign!
  • NickName  •  Beaverton, Oregon  •  23 days ago
    How is this possible? Who are they "getting" from? Must be other Facebook users, which means the getting and giving are exactly 50/50!
  • MVP  •  22 days ago
    Anyone who tries to buy into this stock on opening day will get poked in the pooper.
  • D W  •  23 days ago
    air for sale $ 200 a tin :)))
  • Luke Skywalker  •  Auburn, Michigan  •  23 days ago
    Boy, the Banksters are pushing this like the crap it is, huh?
  • SAM  •  San Francisco, California  •  23 days ago
    I HATE FAKEBOOK
  • UGLY KID  •  Toms River, New Jersey  •  22 days ago
    If you cancel FB......does your information disappear...or can they still sell it off for $140 per profile
  • Jessepal  •  23 days ago
    When the advertisers wake up to the fact they are not getting the best value for their advertising dollars, facebook value will drop like a rock!
  • WilhemenaCooker  •  Intercourse, Pennsylvania  •  23 days ago
    i know FB ad dollars are wasted on me - i use Adblock and don't any ads anywhere when web browsing
  • Jessepal  •  23 days ago
    Do you read the ads that pop up ? I don't and wouldn't want to be paying Facebook millions for them!
  • John  •  Hickory Hills, Illinois  •  23 days ago
    Facebook users may also get more visibility than they bargained for, as employers, investigators and nefarious characters of all stripes routinely mine the data.
  • Jan  •  Munich, Germany  •  23 days ago
    Facebook is just a tool for self promotion. People diluted their definition of "friend" to almost anyone they know,but quantity comes at the expense of quality.
    FB can substitute the old personal websites nobody except the owner ever cared about.
    FB may substitute email,but it's nothing new and not more productive.
    There is nothing revolutionary or significantly productivity enhancing,despite all this senseless marketing,that made most people believe it is necessary to play the FB game,there was even a movie made to promote it.
    FB as a company may actually do well,but if they do,it will happen at the expense of other internet companies,as FB does't have anything revolutionary enough to expand the whole market above its current growth trend.
  • abc123  •  23 days ago
    where is my freakin post!!!! Yahoo censoring at best....in short, facebook for those who have limited social skills and feel the need to let the world know they exist!!! Wow, most be lots of lonely people out there with no true socialization skills to speak or call!!!
  • David  •  23 days ago
    Another Steve Jobs?
    You mean, someone who will outsource thousands of jobs to China? And still be called a hero because he gave people things they didn't need, and charged more for it?

    Funny that... If you make cars and trucks and outsource to China, you're evil.
    If you make "cool" overpriced music players and outsource to China, you're a hero.
  • Obama the Great  •  23 days ago
    Every Facebook user should get 1 free share of the stock to make it more fair, since we are the ones that actually make it popular.
  • Democracy of One  •  23 days ago
    The 'Like' click = a dopamine rush ... Woooaaa! I feel better already. The only down side is I can't 'Like' myself ...huuumm ..this requires deep psychoanalysis.
Loading...
 
Recent Quotes
Symbol Price Change % Chg 
Your most recently viewed tickers will automatically show up here if you type a ticker in the "Enter symbol/company" at the bottom of this module.
You need to enable your browser cookies to view your most recent quotes.
 
Sign-in to view quotes in your portfolios.

Trading Center

Yahoo! Finance on Facebook

  YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER