- Brian Morrissey, Adweek

News
Corp. executives often present MySpace and Facebook as competing in
different markets, with Facebook used as a communications vehicle
and MySpace for entertainment. Whatever the case, a straight line
can be drawn between more time spent on Facebook and less on
MySpace.
According to new figures from Nielsen Online, total minutes spent
on Facebook in April rose 699 percent from a year ago. At MySpace,
meanwhile, total minutes spent fell a jarring 31 percent.
To be sure, MySpace remains a popular draw, with users spending 83
million minutes on the site in April. Yet, that's now a fraction of
the total spent on Facebook, which drew triple the amount of user
time.
Nielsen Online, which shares a parent company with Adweek, also
charted the stunning rise of Twitter. The total time spent on the
site rose 3,712 percent to nearly 5 million hours in the past year.
Those figures only include visits to Twitter.com, not the use of
the many third-party Twitter applications employed to read and
respond to messages. Twitter now ranks as the No. 4 social network
in terms of time spent, according to Nielsen.
Nielsen analyst Jon Gibs said in a statement that
MySpace's reversal of fortune shows the fickle habits of
online consumers -- a cautionary tale for all players.
"Remember Friendster?" he said. "Remember when MySpace was an
unbeatable force? Neither Facebook nor Twitter is immune. Consumers
have shown that they are willing to pick up their networks and move
them to another platform, seemingly at a moment's notice."
Social networking as a whole has been on a roll, according to
Nielsen figures. Total time spent on social networking sites
increased 81 percent compared to a year earlier.
There is one area where MySpace continues to trounce Facebook:
video. In April, it served triple the number of video streams
compared to Facebook, ranking by far as the No. 1 social network
for such viewing activity.
News Corp. has
reshuffled management at MySpace. It
brought in former AOL chief Jon Miller to lead its Internet efforts
and former Facebook exec Owen Van Natta to serve as MySpace
CEO.
Source: Adweek.com
MySpace Suffers as Time on Facebook, Twitter Rises
June 2, 2009
- Brian Morrissey, Adweek

News Corp. executives often present MySpace and Facebook as competing in different markets, with Facebook used as a communications vehicle and MySpace for entertainment. Whatever the case, a straight line can be drawn between more time spent on Facebook and less on MySpace.
According to new figures from Nielsen Online, total minutes spent on Facebook in April rose 699 percent from a year ago. At MySpace, meanwhile, total minutes spent fell a jarring 31 percent.
To be sure, MySpace remains a popular draw, with users spending 83 million minutes on the site in April. Yet, that's now a fraction of the total spent on Facebook, which drew triple the amount of user time.
Nielsen Online, which shares a parent company with Adweek, also charted the stunning rise of Twitter. The total time spent on the site rose 3,712 percent to nearly 5 million hours in the past year. Those figures only include visits to Twitter.com, not the use of the many third-party Twitter applications employed to read and respond to messages. Twitter now ranks as the No. 4 social network in terms of time spent, according to Nielsen.
Nielsen analyst Jon Gibs said in a statement that
MySpace's reversal of fortune shows the fickle habits of online consumers -- a cautionary tale for all players.
"Remember Friendster?" he said. "Remember when MySpace was an unbeatable force? Neither Facebook nor Twitter is immune. Consumers have shown that they are willing to pick up their networks and move them to another platform, seemingly at a moment's notice."
Social networking as a whole has been on a roll, according to Nielsen figures. Total time spent on social networking sites increased 81 percent compared to a year earlier.
There is one area where MySpace continues to trounce Facebook: video. In April, it served triple the number of video streams compared to Facebook, ranking by far as the No. 1 social network for such viewing activity.
News Corp. has
reshuffled management at MySpace. It brought in former AOL chief Jon Miller to lead its Internet efforts and former Facebook exec Owen Van Natta to serve as MySpace CEO.
Source: Adweek.com