Leveraging Technology to Succeed in Business View web version

While Facebook being offline in the U.S. was the big headline, let's not forget that elsewhere in the world many people and businesses rely on WhatsApp for texting and telephone calls. It's not just that with 2 billion users, WhatsApp is wildly popular; in some countries, such as India, Netherlands, Spain, and Italy, it's the overwhelmingly dominant messaging app. For people in many countries, WhatsApp is vital.

The result? Every last one of them was knocked offline, too.

We soon found that even if you accepted that these services were down, there were all kinds of unforeseen spillover effects. For instance, if you use Facebook Login to let your customers log in to your shopping website or Internet of Things (IoT) device, they were locked out as well.

Put it all together and you have both a personal and business disaster. As Mark Donnelly, the start-up founder of HUH Clothing told The New York Times, "With Facebook being down, we're losing thousands in sales. It may not sound like a lot to others, but missing out on four or five hours of sales could be the difference between paying the electricity bill or rent for the month."

Now, Facebook was very "sorry." But its failure still left us holding the bag.

Do you want to go through this again? I wouldn't.

Yes, Facebook plays up that it's a good small business partner, but if it can't hold up its end of the partnership, is it really a good partner?

Clearly, we can't give up on Facebook. There are just too many people who use it to walk away from it. But we can move away from relying on it so much. Instead of doing all your social networking, advertising, and selling on just Facebook and Instagram, start building these efforts out on other social networks such as TikTok, Twitter, and Pinterest.

You should also keep in mind that just because Facebook is the 800-pound gorilla of social networking today, it may not be tomorrow.

Facebook's social meddling and spying are getting to be too much for some people to take. Whistleblower Frances Haugen's revelations that Facebook's products "harm children, stoke division and weaken our democracy" and put profit over moral responsibility came as no surprise. This is, after all the same site that's a hotbed of COVID-19 denial and misinformation and it enabled Cambridge Analytica to harvest 87 million people's Facebook data to benefit Donald Trump in the 2016 election. 

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg talks a good game about putting the good of people first. But the facts undercut his narrative. True, ma and pa looking to keep up with what the kids are doing aren't going to quit Facebook. But if the kids leave Facebook — that's another story.

Remember, for all those people you know now on Facebook, there once was a time when everyone you knew read the daily local paper. More recently, there was a time when everyone had an AOL account. Remember AOL? Recall when Yahoo was the site everyone used for search?

Things can change. Quickly.

If you think Facebook is too big to fail, think again. And make sure that if Facebook fails, it doesn't take your business down with it.

Get ready for that day now by diversifying your social network spend, advertising, and platform reliance. I'm not saying dump Facebook. That would be foolish. But as Facebook staggers from a breathtakingly bad technology failure and its reputation takes hit after hit, it's time to consider your options. Down the road, you'll be glad you did.

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Gone in minutes, out for hours: Outage shakes Facebook

When apps used by billions of people worldwide blinked out, lives were disrupted, businesses were cut off from customers — and some Facebook employees were locked out of their offices. Read more.

 

Small business owners reveal just how much the Facebook outage affected them

One business saw their sales fall to one-fourth of what they normally would have been. Read more.

 

Facebook apologizes for outage, says services 'back up and running'

Facebook has apologised for an outage that lasted almost ten hours, blaming a configuration change to routers for causing its apps to crashing. Read more.

 

Outage highlights how vital Facebook has become worldwide

The six-hour outage of Facebook, Instagram and Whatsapp on Monday was a headache for many casual users. Read more.

 

Facebook outage is felt acutely by small-business owners

During Facebook Inc.'s global outage Monday, online clothing boutique Exul recorded no sales for the first time since it opened in November. Read more.

 

Instagram's outage convinced small business owners that they need their own websites

Jewelry designer Alex Rankin sells 25 handmade rings on a busy day via her Instagram store, earning her just over $150. On Monday, with the social media giant down for hours, she sold zero. Read more.

 
 

About the Author
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, aka sjvn, has been writing about the intersection of business and technology for over 30 years. He continues to scoop up awards for his valuable insights and practical guidance in highly technical publications, business & technology magazines, and mainstream newspapers.

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