By removing anonymity social media has found its voice, argues Jack Wallington.
Online communities and sites with user generated content (UGC) have been an obsession of mine since the late 90’s ever since I discovered chat rooms, instant messenger and forums. My single greatest passion is being involved in and running online communities for people to chat and share ideas and information. UGC has since been morphed by marketers into ‘social media’, which, when you look beyond the jargon, is just a more advanced platform for UGC with one significant difference: the removal of anonymity behind usernames. In my youth mine was the wildly inappropriate “FatXena”.
FatXena was a trigger happy opinionated so and so, whereas Jack Wallington was far tamer in reality. This created a split in personality between my online and offline life. I wasn’t alone either, it was always well documented how vocal people felt they could be behind a username online even when the person tapping away was a timid little mouse.
Thanks to social networks like Facebook, LinkedIn and even UGC like BBC’s Have Your Say, this e-bipolar disorder is gradually being wiped out, although it still exists on forums which make up the vast majority of social media. I have many theories about the effects this is having, but for advertisers my point here is that removing anonymity means users are a more accurate portrayal of their genuine personality. One thing I’ve observed in my own group of friends is that the most social offline are also the most social online – in the past, during FatXena’s time, it was generally the absolute opposite.
There’s always been much talk among online community managers about finding the ‘opinion formers’ when in the past, the ones they found online were probably not the kind of people to drive opinion offline. Therefore, the real reason for marketers to be excited about ‘social media’ is not only because it is mainstream, but because there is a very real crossover in personalities. I’ll leave it up to you to decide what this means for your business, but to me, it’s one of the most exciting developments of our era.
- Why advertise online?
- In this section
- Ten reasons to advertise online
- Getting started
- Brand advertising online
- How the IAB can help
Did you know
40.3 million
UKOM data shows that over 40 million people in the UK (aged 2+) use the internet every month
- Disciplines & markets
- Disciplines
- Vertical markets
Did you know
£1.128 billion
In 2011 UK advertisers spent over £1 billion on display advertising alone, with the sector growing 13.4% year on year (IAB / PwC AdSpend Study Full Year 2011)
- Research
- In this section
- Online adspend
- Mobile adspend
- Research library
- Audience measurement
- Submit your own research
Featured
- Resources
- Policy
- Events
- Training
- News & Blogs
- In this section
- Browse all news & blogs
- About
- In this section
- Our story
- Membership
- Member directory
- Councils
- Creative Showcase
- Press centre
- The IAB team
- Contact
- Jobs
- International IABs
- IASH
- Industry links
Did you know

Over 80 per cent of IAB Events are free to members. Over the years, the IAB has welcomed a range of high profile speakers including Sir Martin Sorrell, Bill Gates, Stephen Fry, Jimmy Carr and Dara O'Briain.
You are here
Sidebar content
...goes here
Sidebar content
...goes here













