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Google+? No, Google-minus

Until I saw this Farhad Manjoo piece on why Google+ is over, I had forgotten that I’m on the service. I haven’t looked at it in months. I barely use Facebook either, unless a friend writes me on FB, or I want to see what’s going on with this or that friend. But that’s something. […]

Until I saw this Farhad Manjoo piece on why Google+ is over, I had forgotten that I’m on the service. I haven’t looked at it in months. I barely use Facebook either, unless a friend writes me on FB, or I want to see what’s going on with this or that friend. But that’s something. Google+? I got nothin’. Manjoo:

And yet, I’ve been surprised by just how dreary the site has become. Although Google seems determined to keep adding new features, I suspect there’s little it can do to prevent Google+ from becoming a ghost town. Google might not know it yet, but from the outside, it’s clear that G+ has started to die—it will hang on for a year, maybe two, but at some point Google will have to put it out of its misery

Why am I so sure that Google+ can’t be saved? Because there’s no way to correct Google’s central failure. Back when companies were clamoring to create brand pages on the network—or users were looking to create profiles with pseudonyms, another phenomenon that Google shut down—the company ought to have acceded to its users’ wishes and accommodated them. If Google wasn’t ready for brand pages in the summer, it shouldn’t have launched Google+ until it was. And this advice goes more generally—by failing to offer people a reason to keep coming back to the site every day, Google+ made a bad first impression. And in the social-networking business, a bad first impression spells death.

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