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Dave Taylor
Dave Taylor has been involved with the online world since 1980 and is recognized globally as an expert on both technical and business issues. He has been published over a thousand times, launched four Internet-related startup companies, has written twenty business and technical books and holds both an MBA and MS Ed. He's a columnist for the Boulder Daily Camera and Linux Journal and frequently appears in other publications both online and in print. Additionally, Dave maintains four weblogs: The Business Blog at Intuitive.com, Ask Dave Taylor, Dave On Film, and GoFatherhood. Based in beautiful Boulder, Colorado, Dave is an award-winning speaker, sought after conference and workshop participant and frequent guest on radio and podcast programs, as well as active member of his community and busy single father to three children.

Notifications on Google Plus are broken

In the last few weeks, I've grown to really enjoy working with Google Plus, the search engine giant's second attempt (third attempt?) at a social network to rival Facebook. Clean, elegant, responsive and fast for people to engage, I'm liking it more than Facebook in a lot of ways.

Except that Google hasn't really though through the entire issue of how to share with a user who is following them, and it means I'm not paying attention to people who I really do want to have a symmetric relationship with on the service.

That's the big difference between G+ and FB: Google Plus is asymmetric, meaning that you can follow me (in the Google Plus world it's referred to as "circling" because you add someone to one or more of your follow circles) without me having to follow you back. On Facebook every relationship is symmetric: we can't be friends unless we both green light it. Huge difference and one that I really like, actually.

Except now I find that 300-400 people each day are "circling" me and I have no idea who the majority of them are because there's just insufficient information from Google shown about how we're connected, if at all.

Here's what I mean:

google plus notifications

You can see four people shown here, one of whom has their name in Chinese, three of whom in English. But who are they? Do we know each other? Have we connected or followed each other on a different social service? Do they have a Web site that points to my online content?

The pop-up I am showing for John Yaeger is an improvement because it shows the number of people we have in common (e.g. that both of us have circled). That's social proof, and that's darn helpful as a first step. In fact, it's that "people in common" count that I'd like to see next to each and every person so I can quickly scan and say "ah, 17 in common, what's the story with this otherwise unrecognized name?"

But there's a deeper issue here. Google owns the search engine space and has rich, deep and sophisticated profiles on each of us, profiles that include our interconnectedness. Why isn't that data included here somehow so that I can have a quick visual clue who has circled me that I should be paying attention to versus those that are followers or just building up big circles but that, realistically, probably won't make it into my Friends circle?

Imagine if G+ was using predictive analysis behind the scenes and that it had a five star scale next to each name that offered a quick clue about who it believed I was most likely to circle up? Or maybe just added a star or slightly changed the background color of the box that included people that have a non-zero "people in common" list? (better, let me have a slider so I can say the minimum for them to be highlighted is X people, not just 1).

There's more to be done with Google Plus for sure, and this is one area that's increasingly failing for me. What's in the cards, G+ team?

Posted by Dave Taylor at August 20, 2011 8:37 AM

Comments

Honestly until G+ implements a better notification system someone who already knows the person they are circling or someone who is really interested in making a connection with the person they circled should send a private post after they circle you. I know it's a little bit of extra work but I would think it well worth the effort especially for someone trying to make a potential business connection.

Posted by: Jim F on August 20, 2011 9:38 AM

The Circles feature closely resemble the follow feature of Twitter. this makes Google+ look like a hybrid combination of Facebook and Twitter

Posted by: Justin Dupre on August 22, 2011 7:10 PM

you are so inteligent

Posted by: marjan on August 23, 2011 11:50 PM

Yeah, I still need to learn about using Google plus. I'm not totally sure why/how to use this or google buzz.

Posted by: tim on August 26, 2011 10:27 PM
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