Don’t Just Search, Get Educated
 

Our “strangers” sphere is an asset, not a threat

Author: Jennifer Gosse
Posted on February 2nd, 2009. About Social Media.

To follow up on my last blog post and illustrate just how much strangers now influence our opinions and decisions, I thought I’d post some revealing findings about the importance of worldwide input via social media.

In Universal McCann’s recent report, “When did we start trusting strangers?” in the “Proliferation of influencer channels” section, it is posited that the web is encouraging trust among strangers the world over. This trend does not correlate with the societal assumption that strangers are out to get us. Rather, we see the web as an equalizer; a readily accessible platform for expression of all peoples. Tapping into that global authority expands our knowledge boundaries and allows us to shape our opinions based on the widest range of (assumably) unbiased, unsolicited and candid information. If knowledge is power, then it seems that we’re craving the power of that collective voice so much that we now hold stranger’s opinions in nearly as high a regard as the people we personally know.

  • We trust strangers online almost as much as face to face recommendation
  • The top four trusted forms of recommendation are all direct conversation -
  • significantly two of these are now on internet channels: email and Instant Messenger
  • We would much rather trust a stranger than a celebrity, by a long way
  • We trust a stranger over any paid-for communications or advertising
  • We trust a stranger more in a regulated environment like reviews in a retail site such as Amazon or an auction site like eBay
  • Blogs are becoming a trusted form of opinion, blogs from people you know rank at number 7 and those by from professionals or micropublishers, number 15.
  • Blogs are almost as trusted as their written word counterparts, magazines and newspapers
  • Not everything online is trusted: emails from companies are only marginally more trusted than celebrities

(Source: “When did we start trusting strangers?” page 35.)

Those in our “strangers” sphere might not be our BFF just yet, but from the looks of this report and others cropping up weekly, it seems that they’re quickly becoming PGF (pretty good friends).