Dear Facebook…
Dear Facebook,
I love your application for so many reasons. Not only can I keep in contact with old and new friends, but I can also over-share with new coworkers while broadcasting to the entire world that “Yes, I will go out of my way to step on a crunchy looking leaf.”
Despite your many benefits, I do have to tell you that I have come across a major flaw in your application that needs immediate attention. When connecting with other profiles, you only have one option; you must request friendship. While I can see how this would seem like the perfect way to share profiles and information, but I would like to point out that not everyone in a person’s life sphere can fall under the category of “Friends.”
Let me give you an example. I just started at a new job 3 months ago. I love my job. LOVE my job. I have started receiving friend requests from people at work to join my Facebook network. At first, I will admit I was slightly hesitant to add co-workers to the inner workings of my life. Pressing “accept” meant that they would know what I was doing after work, what I looked like on the weekends, or worse, if I was playing on Facebook during work hours.
After much debate, I decided I would accept. As I said before, I LOVE my job, and wouldn’t want to do anything to impede my relationships with the people I work with. And we all know that a Facebook denial is like a passive aggressive way of saying “I don’t really like you.”
A funny thing did happen this week however. I got a friend request from someone I work with. I didn’t immediately recognize their picture. But as I poured over their profile pictures, I realized that I had indeed met them. In fact, I’d met them several times. They were the unfriendly person in the lunch room. The person I would smile and say, “Good Morning, how are you?” almost every morning while I poured my coffee. And they would return a closed lipped smile, say nothing, turn on their heel and rush off.
So you can imagine I was a bit baffled to find their request for friendship. We aren’t friends. In fact, I don’t know that this person has ever actually spoken to me before. If I was to see them in a dark bar, I wouldn’t be able to decipher whether or not I knew them.
Clearly, accepting a friend request would be a farce. But conversely, choosing denial would be like the kiss of death at work. It would only be a matter of days before other departments would be whispering in the bathroom about how unfriendly I am.
Clearly Facebook, a solution needs to be found. And I can tell you what that solution is. You need to add an “Acquaintance Request.” This would be made for people that you sort of know, but not really. It a good way to tell people “I like you… a lot even. I probably wouldn’t call you on a Friday night to see what you are up to, but I most likely would stop by your desk on Monday to see how your weekend was.”
In addition to the Acquaintance Request, I think you should implement an “I Know of this Person Request.” This would have saved my butt last week. It’s a polite way of saying, “I know who this person is, but I never really talk to them in real life. In fact, if I passed them in the hallway at work I would most likely ignore them even though I totally stalk their profile pictures when I’m cruising Facebook in the evening.”
Facebook, these two small adjustments would make my whole life a lot easier. With the use of these two new features, I would stop feeling guility for having Google people to remember who they are, and what party we talked for five seconds which apparently constituted us a “Friends.” It would mean that I wouldn’t have to worry that I am going to piss off my co-workers. And even better yet, it would mean that I wouldn’t have to remember to login a week later to delete all of the “friends” I’d accepted in an effort to save face, but I really had no intention of keeping.
Thanks Facebook for your time an attention on this very important issue. Keep up the good work.
Love,
Jenni Brown
ps – can you cut a deal with FarmVille to get me some Mansions? I really want a Mansion on my farm.
Did you just write, “google someone”?
I think there should be a social network specifically for work contacts. Let’s create it. It could interface with Outlook somehow. People would post their status updates about work and people could comment on it. It would be a fun way to network, share ideas, and avoid the whole “we are coworkers and not friends thing”.
Yeah, you might have convinced me to Google creepy stalkers
I do there is one of those social networks already….LinkedIn anyone?
lol.
You can make lists on Facebook and customize who sees what to a pretty large extent. In other words you can differentiate the above, in private and by yourself. I don’t think it’s necessary or appropriate to publicly distinguish levels of connection. What if two people consider each other two different things? When someone “friends” you and you “acquaintance” them, or less, that’s bound to create drama.
Jenni Brown!! I don’t even do the Facebook thing even though I have an account. I seldom check it but frequently get friend requests or recommendations. I guess that means I’m OLD…no on second thought, that means I’m out of touch because I have friends older than I am that Facebook it all the time :/
PS I love and miss reading your blogs…keep them coming. Your audience awaits