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Peach: the next great social network or a massive flop?

by Yucatan Times
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The peach emoji grew to notoriety as a way to represent something vastly different than the fruit. That all changed Friday when a new social network boasting the enticing URL peach.cool emerged as the latest obsession among social-savvy circles.

We haven’t seen this much hype for a new social network since the rush (and eventual crush) of Ello. Peach has piqued the curiosity of social pros and digital marketers, leading to a subsequent land grab to secure usernames and establish a presence on the new social network. It could either become the next big thing or a massive flop and another waste of space on your iPhone. The reality is that no one knows what Peach’s future will be — and that’s the best part!

For social media managers, the dramatic rise of a new social network creates a headache of ANOTHER place to manage your brand. But for the casual tech star, it presents an opportunity — a chance to feel like a kid again and experience something new for the first time. Curiosity is king.

peach-social-network

When I first started playing with Peach, I was bombarded with questions from colleagues about the app: What is it? What does it do? How do I get it? Is it like Snapchat? Will businesses use it? What’s the ROI? (That last question was likely a joke.)

I personally experience tremendous joy when a new social network comes out because the unknown is awesome. There are no use cases or prescribed norms — you get to blaze a trail and help define how a community will be shaped.

With that in mind, I have laid out a few suggestions on how to approach a new social network:

Experiment

Play around. Break things. Forget about how you would use an established network like Twitter or Facebook. In the case of Peach, I was able to make some cool animated GIFs that seemed to get everyone excited. I also messed around with the draw function and caked a few people. It was an innocent activity that started out as waving, but quickly escalated to throwing cake. I was a little offended when someone quarantined me back, but then I discovered a whole set of activities you could do to your friends — it was like Facebook’s “Poke” function on steroids.

Screenshot of Peach</i)

Screenshot of Peach

It’s a team sport

Discovering new social networks is a team sport. You can only figure out so much in isolation before you need a little help from your friends. As I was messing around with Peach on my iPhone, my colleague Adam Houghton found a user guide with short codes that opened up a host of new features. Imagine discovering UP, UP, DOWN, DOWN, LEFT, RIGHT, B, A, START — it was that level of excitement.

All of a sudden, I was able to add my location, search for and share GIFs, and insert the weather from where I stood. This instantly made the app more sticky and had me further down the rabbit hole of discovery.

Pro Tip: Type “help” when you are posting to see the entire list of magic words.

 

Creep your friends

See what your friends are up to on the app. Is someone doing something cooler that you? Most likely. My colleague Matt Diederichs was up to some interesting things on his Peach feed and that led me to discover some additional features like commenting and ratings. Matt also had a head start on following people, so I scoped out his friends list and added some new people to follow.

Another good way to find friends, which can be a challenge on Peach, is to search your address book by entering your phone number. I check daily to see if new friends have joined Peach—this helps me keep in touch with more people and keep my content fresh.

Is Peach right for brands?

The inevitable question that will arise is whether Peach will work for businesses.

Trends have been moving towards apps that offer more than just text and image combinations. Twitter and Facebook have added GIFs. Instagram added video. Snapchat has a combination of easy to create media and filters. All of these changes have been geared towards putting more excitement into social networks that may be at risk of becoming stale.

“I like that it’s bringing the fun aspect back to social media,” said Diederichs, who is a social campaigns specialist at Hootsuite. “It’s got all the little questions and secret words. It’s more fun than business or serious engagement.”

But with any new network, understanding the value can be a challenge. Laurie Dillon-Schalk, VP of strategy and insights at FUSE Marketing Group, wonders how Peach will benefit brands, “It feels like there is a land grab for brand names and for large followings. It seems without verification, or bios or some of the key elements from other social networks, that the credibility of accounts will be in question.”

“Furthermore,” she added, “I’m not seeing how this network gains earned media value.”

 

What I like about Peach

After spending the better part of the weekend exploring Peach, these are some of my favorite features.

I always struggle to keep up in the GIF game with my younger, more culturally connected colleagues. Peach solves that problem for me. Its GIF selector allows you to search by keyword and quickly populates your feed with a carousel of GIF options to choose from. Seamless!

Facebook asks “What’s on your mind?” and Twitter prompts you with What’s happening?” to get you to post content. These are pretty open ended questions and it can sometimes be difficult to get started. Peach, on the other hand, has an array of prompts from “What’s something you can’t live without?” to “What would you love to win a lifetime supply of?” This is an interesting way to get users more active.

Screenshots from Peach

Screenshots from Peach

I enjoy the ability to do more than poke someone. There are some fun options to engage your friends, although, it would probably be a bit awkward to “put a ring on” one of your social media buddies. Or maybe not!

When you type “good morning” into your feed, Peach also includes the weather and the time. This is handy if you want to keep track of when you wake up or boast about the warm weather you are experiencing while on vacation and your friends are back home freezing.

Posts appear to disappear after 48 hours. As a long time Twitter user, sometimes it would be nice for older posts to not be searchable for the remainder of my life. A 48 hour lifespan seems long enough in social media for content to exist. It also helps drive adoption, because you will need to keep checking Peach to ensure you don’t miss content from friends. This also reinforces why Peach is calling itself a messaging app more than a social network.

Sometimes you want to emphasize what you are saying. The bold text option is cool and easy to use.

Pro Tip: Type “shout” when you are posting to activate this magic words feature.

peach-shout

As an iPhone user, I love that Peach is iPhone only (for now). There’s something nice about exclusivity. But already I’m hearing grumbles from Android users. We’ll see how patient they will have to be for their turn to quarantine a friend on Peach!

What I dislike about Peach

In the early hours, the app kept signing a bunch of us out. Unless this was some sort of social experiment to help people remember another new password, it was slightly annoying. It seems that Peach is working on fixing this bug, though.

There is no ability to search for friends by their username. You can input their username and your friend will get a notification, but if you mistype their name, you can’t connect. I also like the idea of deciding later whether to accept a friend request, however, I did that to a few people and I’m not sure when they will come back from the abyss—if ever!

On the topic of friends, it can be hard to discover what your friends are sharing. This was a common complaint shared by many of my friends on Peach.

With any new network, you want to discover new friends quickly. During the first 24 hours of the app’s existence, the friends of friends feed was helpful to discover other people you may know on Peach, but since more and more fake accounts have been created, this feature has quickly become useless.

On a related note, I’m not a fan of all the fake accounts that’ve popped up during the initial land grab for user names—it just adds to the noise. One of the reasons why I’m enjoying Peach so far is that it is less noisy than both my Facebook and Twitter feeds, which have grown out of control and beyond help.

I don’t like how the default privacy setting allows your content to be shown to friends of friends. I understand that this is a way to make the network more sticky as users gain access to more original content in the early days when the content flow is low, but unless you go digging to find this setting, most people will be unaware of who they are sharing their content with.

I like having the ability to share which song I’m listening to with my friends, however, the feature stopped my Spotify from playing my song meaning there was no music playing to identify. The first time I tried to get Peach to identify a song I was listening to on my laptop, it was misidentified. The second time, it nailed it: Warren G — Regulate.

 

Final thoughts

Peach is a fun app which can make the mundane more exciting. It has elements of Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, Foursquare, Shazam, and plenty more. Some readers may recall the app Path—there are some similarities. However, Peach is user friendly for the most part. As for its business value? Only time will tell. For now, get curious, explore, and have some fun!

 

By Jaime Stein for hootsuite.com

Source: http://blog.hootsuite.com/

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