The fractional economics of the So.Me

Posted on July 21, 2011

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Probably the most interesting thing to emerge out of all this investment in the creation of social media business models based on Metcalfe’s Law is it has created a new kind of financial alchemy similar to the fractional reserve banking model that has devoured the US economy over the past 40 years.

As you may or may not know fractional reserve banking is the “miraculous” technique by which a $1 issued by the US Federal Reserve ends up becoming $10,000 in the shopping malls and on the high streets of downtown America.

We see similar economics in the valuations for the flagship social networks and social gaming platforms (i.e. $100+ for each member on the network) and the real level of economic activity across the Freemium model (i.e. less than 1% are engaged enough with the service to pay). Add these two trends together and we discover the valuation of the network “miraculously” converts each of the ‘active’ members into a $10,000+ valuation.

No wonder investors are excited. Social networks are fast becoming the next generation Federal Reserve.

Metcalfe’s Law is now what about 30 years old? Some 20 years before that another great theorist, Marshall McLuhan (Who is coincidentally would be 100 years old today if he was still with us) had some rather more radical and arguable more prescient ideas about the future of communications.

Best known for his the “Medium is the message” McLuhan is probably lesser known for his ideas about how the real challenge that will need to be faced in the future will be time.

As McLuhan once said: “For tribal man space was the uncontrollable mystery. For technological man it is time that occupies the same role.”    -  Paul Miller Dead Simple: Marshall McLuhan and the Art of the Record

You see Metcalfe’s Law was, and still is, merely an iterative qualification to a problem that had already been solved ( i.e. The shrinking of distance between the author and the audience). Radio, TV and the Telephone had already removed the barriers to distance. Metcalfe’s law merely described the speed by which the democratisation and commoditization of that activity would happen when the technology evolved to the point where it allowed it to happen.

The golden key to the new era of media and communications (as McLuhan suggested) is time and the future belongs to those who can do for time what fractional reserve banking practices have done for money supply.

This I think in the end is the key difference between Google’s search business and Facebook’s Social Business. While Google makes time by allowing you to find answers to questions relatively quickly Facebook (along with all other media) consumes time.

The future of media and communications then isn’t about the manipulation of messages, conversations or networks. It is about the manipulation of time. In this context there is no Beginning middle and end there is just now. More importantly there is the opportunity to make now more than just now. There is the opportunity to make now^2 or better still now^now.

A future where the economic potential of Metcalfe’s Law is applied to time rather than networks.

You can probably see now why I find the so called thought leadership and fauxionary innovation coming out of Silicon Valley so redundant or a the younger generation would say “So Yesterday”.

Both the Dot.Com and the So.Me are little more than the next logical step in the evolution of 2-D print into hyper media via desktop publishing and word processing. A 15th century media construct repackaged into an electronic wanderlust. So despite all the hype generated by the thought leaders in Silicon Valley, the web was never going to be the future of media. Just some mutant offspring from the collision of paper with databases and telecoms.

This is also why, if we continue to think of the future of mobile media being little more than the web optimised for viewing on the mobile phone, it will be a travesty and a lost opportunity to create the first new media channel of the 21st Century.

What makes the mobile phone infinitely more exciting than the web or the personal computer as the future of media (as opposed the future of media creation which is what the PC was back in the 1980′s and 1990′s) is it represents the tipping point where the electronic 3-D experience of television and video games becomes an 4-D^2 experience.

Why 4-D^2? well if you think of TV providing a 3-D experience (2-D Space + Time) in the digital world and then shrink that experience down into a portable device that can then be used to navigate the real 4-D world (3-D space + time) all around you then you have a revolutionary new media platform that delivers an 4-D^2 experience. Simply because it allows you to navigate both the real world and the digital world simultaneously.

The challenge though is not to imagine the Mobile Phone as the 7th Screen (i.e. the Blank Canvas of the iPhone) but to reimagine the Mobile Phone as a time wallet. A magical device that allows the owner to immerse themselves in the experience of creating and sharing fractional time.

Put simply, put aside all your messages and start thinking about moments.

The challenge ahead is to learn to live and to profit in a world of “real-time” communications where narrative is all but absent. Where structured time rapidly evolves (or should that be dissolves?) into unstructured time.

This is in the end is why I suspect in this brave new world of media and communications Asia may have the competitive edge over the West. Why? Simply because the two cultures have a very different perception of time. For the West time is linear. There is always the beginning middle and end. The narrative. In the East time is more attune to the moment. Something along the lines of what we have done in the past has led us to this moment and what we will do now will determine what our future will be. Here is the West we are only just starting to come to terms with the idea that to compete in this brave new world where distance is no barrier we have to, as Albert Einstein put it, “Learn from yesterday, live for today and hope for tomorrow“.

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Posted in: Ideas, Innovation