Social Media Platforms in the Arab World

Mohamed El Dahshan mentioned our Watwet ever so briefly in the Guardian a few days ago. —A bit too fleetingly for what Watwet was at the time, I would add!  Be that as it may, it reminded me that I wanted to say a few things about Arab social media at the time when we shut down Watwet.  The question that came up then was why hasn’t there been a runaway homegrown networking / social media success in the Arab world?  It also touches on the question of “cloning” that was bandied about sometime around June 2011.

As a participant in this category, this is not an easy question for an organisation like ours.  But here is a highly preliminary attempt at a few detached and fair-minded observations on this phenomenon:

  • Localisation is usually the key play in “cloning” – and this assumes that there are dimensions to what we define as local that a business can be organised around.  This, it turns out, is particularly difficult for a proper platform business unless specific barriers can be identified, reinforced quickly, and protected (all by virtue of providing something that users really appreciate over the long-term…  All this while you are trying to feed yourself, compete with the likes of YouTube, and bootstrap without much funding or strategic support.)
  • In cultural products, there is the expectation that the local revolves around the language and the product.  Arabs want to see Arabic content, in Arabic, on an Arab platform, where they can comment amongst themselves.  Hmm…  Not so simple, it turns out.  It works in certain contexts (forums, e.g.) but less so in the newer platforms.   And there are the specifics: at first there was little Arabic content, early adopters cared less about Arabic content because they were westernised, and ultimately the draw of the global community overwhelms that of the inhabitants of smaller countries with as little as 5 million people.
  • Our assumptions about cultural products being “more local” were mistaken.  Given that they are digital, they are even more remotely serviceable than, say, unsold black boots with velcro straps that exist in 8 sizes in 20 to 30 each in a warehouse in Dubai which a vendor wants to sell at any cost (without publicly showing a discounted price).  Compare that to a video by an Arab singer that a teen-ager in Dhahran wants to watch.  The former requires payments, shipping, etc. and is not so efficiently served by Google.  The latter requires building a platform/network fast enough to achieve escape velocity or really getting SEO down pat.  When it comes to media platform, barriers are weak in the Arab world.
  • So, why does China and Russia boast their own highly powerful social media/network sites, and not the Arab world?  Partly it is an assortment of contingent facts (better luck, entrepreneurs, etc.), but probably more structural features play big roles:  (a)censorship clearly helps some in China, (b)huge markets with large private capital accustomed to risk-taking, (c)local elites that are more local and less anglophone owing to a “modernised” culture that has deeper links to its own identity (this is a far more subtle point than it sounds which I am happy to elaborate later), (d)sheer size means that what happens in the country is probably a lot less determined by American or global opinion, (e)lower adoption of English – even though this is changing rapidly of course, (f)deeper academic bodies and traditions that create not only local enterprises but home-grown technologies, (g)more vibrant non-digital cultural anchors and public spheres that connect these platforms with a tougher local cultural fabric.  And so on…
  • As important as the above structural factors is probably “path dependence”:  the early adopters of Watwet were early adopters of the digital life in the Arab world, and they were overwhelmingly the savvy lot who had one eye watching Silicon Valley from the age of 12.  They invariably used English heavily, were anglophone, and were interested in connecting to the West both to be in touch with their own abroad but also with westerners.  And the masses almost always follow the elites, according to a marketing guru I know.  But the counter example may be (this needs to be verified) Saudi forums.  These are super local, occur in Arabic, and garner respectable traffic. Might there be something to do with the history of how they evolved, the user base it happened to pull in, and traditions they created?
  • Ultimately, there is just one conclusion to all this:  it is simply not easy to clone/localise in social media.  The global first-mover advantage of network businesses have a pretty incontestable logic when it comes to platforms. Nevertheless, there are niche plays, and there is always room to be number two or three.  The rewards of the former are interesting, of the latter rather more complicated to assess.  But in either case, the emphasis becomes very deeply on execution.  The team will have to out-execute to remain number two.
Incidentally, on a global level, I think this state of affairs will continue for half a decade or so.  Facebook, Twitter, YouTube/Google, Amazon, Apple – all will dominate the platform/network and will continue to go vertical in pursuit of profits.  But then probably some serious regulation will come in to play, though probably with less effect in the poorer countries, such as the Arab world.  The monopoly power being accumulated is becoming so huge that their vertical moves will eventually become intolerable for democratic societies.  But that is another blog entry.

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No More Sexual Outrage at Tootcorp!

One of the things about big shifts in the tides is that it exposes all sorts of weaknesses. One of the most recent (and dramatic) instance of this is Fukushima, where a a rather big one exposed TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Co.) for what it has been legendary: arrogance. The ancient Greeks used to call this ὕβρις (or hubris), which apparently derives from an original meaning of “arrogance, or sexual outrage.” Aha.

We at Tootcorp have had our share of “arrogance, or sexual outrage.” This evening we were discussing the mistakes we made over the years and certain themes come up recurrently: lack of focus, not listening enough to the users, ignoring the early adopters, too focused on the technology, bias for cloning, too tough with investors, too purist and craftsman-like, etc… But ultimately, it all essentially comes down to hubris. Hubris that itoot.net at one point hosted possibly a third of the elite Arab blogosphere, that ikbis.com was feted by international media and even covered by American TV (back when flickr was as big a phenomenon as YouTube), and within a few days of zoofs’s launch no less than a google director blogged about it thus “this version nails it.” In other words, validation may not just be a good thing.

Which is why we should have had a professional investor to back us up early on. Not just because of the money, but because we needed more tough love in the earlier years of each of our sites. As you may know (though surely not remember, as this has not happened in the lifetime of any Arab you or I know…), when generals win wars they come back to gigantic martial processions. The Romans called these marches “triumphs.” Lest the triumphal cries of “hail caesars” got to their head, a Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa coming back after defeating Mark Anthony made sure that a slave constantly whispered into his ears something along the lines “remember, you are merely a mortal.” Or so it is said…

I take all this too far. We didn’t have Roman triumphs or processions, and certainly didn’t need slaves. But it feels good to come clean on our “sexual outrage” as we prepare for the next battle…

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The Heat of 2012

Judging from what analysts are saying, 2012 will be another bumpy year, a year of no havens.  Elections everywhere where it matters, gigantic economic imbalances (to put it mildly), pretty nasty turn of events in Emerging Markets (including China), and a messy turning of the leaves of US geopolitical fortunes.

The Arab Spring looks less warm and rejuvenating today than it did half a year ago, and it is abundantly clear that we need to brace ourselves for a roller coaster ride. Things are not going as expected.  Or perhaps they are.  In any event, that’s just the way it is: change of the magnitude we are experiencing involves a contest of so many players, so many interests, so many points of view, at so many different levels of politics and society.  The cost of freedoms and better societies is not cheap.

None of this makes life easier for a social media company in the Middle East, where all this topsy turvy accompanies the already turbulent landscape of what we used to call web 2.0. But coming from a career in trading financial markets, this constant of uncertainty is a familiar way of life. All the better for us to embrace it.  After all, strong materials are forged under high pressure and heat, not sunshine and a polishing cloth.  In all likelihood, 2012 is a crucible year.  And so, we roll up the sleeves!

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“What would you do if you weren’t afraid?”

That apparently is a sign on Facebook offices. Clearly the imperative is to innovate, as well as to share things before they are perfected. The other slogan at FB is “Done is better than perfect.” “Iterate, iterate, iterate!” says Sheryl Sandberg.

Iteration is a word we’ve been bandying around internally for years now. We are not particularly good at it —though not awful— due mostly to a lack of resources. We are just too thinly spread to get things done quickly enough, which clearly slows down our learning, feedback intensity with our community, and ultimately hurts our ability to deliver. —We are doing something about expanding our resources…

Be that as it may, the other day we decided to focus some time on becoming more intentional and explicit about our culture and passions as a company. This improved company site is part of the effort. It is also part of an effort to become more fearless, be more open, more engaging with our community, and therefore iterate. Indeed, we even decided to stop trying to perfect our tagline and go with it and see how it goes.

“Arab Content for an Open Society” might sound a bit too NGO-ish but for the umbrella brand we think it is a good start. It has the merit of being honest and direct about who we are, our beliefs:  most of our work is social media though we have social networking ambitions. We are Arab, and we are committed to a tolerant, fair, fearless, advancing society. That is, one that does not fear iterating itself.

Mazen Arafat

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