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Frenemies of Facebook -- II

February 8, 2010

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New company, new controversy. Same familiar faces.

Just over a year after College Prowler got outed as the force behind a marketing campaign on Facebook designed to steer first-year students to its Web site, a roommate matching start-up called URoomSurf last month began trying to penetrate the market using similar tactics.

It might come as little surprise, then, that the new campaign was co-led one of the main perpetrators of the College Prowler effort, Justin Gaither, and brought to light by Brad Ward, now the CEO of the higher-ed marketing firm BlueFuego, who exposed the College Prowler campaign in late 2008.

Unlike College Prowler, which created general “Class of” groups without revealing their commercial underpinnings, the groups created by URoomSurf explicitly advertised the company’s services — using its own (relatively ambiguous) logo as each group’s thumbnail image and occasionally naming URoomSurf in the group title.

But some college admissions officials have been rubbed the wrong way by the company’s marketing strategy, which they say has involved no consultation with campus housing officials. Instead, the company has been marketing directly to students through Facebook, creating hundreds of Facebook groups with names such as “Students of University of Iowa Class of 2014 - Looking For Roommates!” Most of the groups have attracted several dozen students, some of whom might be unaware that the colleges themselves did not create the groups.

Dan Thibodeau, who co-founded URoomSurf with Gaither, said this was a perfectly legitimate approach. “Our Web site is a meeting place where students can find future classmates and be matched to potential roommates,” Thibodeau wrote in a response to Ward’s blog post, which framed the company as a scam. “…We are trying to make students aware of our Web site and are doing so transparently and with no ill intent, contrary to what this blog seems to imply." The company offers the matching service for free, and says it plans to monetize the business through display advertisements. It said it also may add paid features.

But some college officials view the company's Facebook-based marketing strategy as inappropriate. J.D. Ross, director of new media at Hamilton College, said the URoomSurf-sponsored Facebook groups are likely to confuse incoming students and create unrealistic expectations about the college’s ability to match them with the classmates they had found on URoomSurf. Some colleges also prefer to avoid having incoming students select their own roommates because it could discourage them from branching out.

“We think we can create ways to help colleges handle volume of roommate requests if they are willing to work with us in the future,” a URoomSurf spokesperson told Inside Higher Ed. “But for now, our focus is to deliver value to our student users who have been asking for this type of service for years.”

Ross also said URoomSurf had posted advertisements on the wall and discussion forum of the official Facebook group the college had set up for the incoming first-year class, even after he had requested that they not do so. Another commenter on Ward’s blog reported similar behavior, and others echoed Ross’s concern that having a third party inserting itself into the housing process without coordinating with campus officials could mislead students and create confusion.

“They’re coming into a place where they haven’t had a dialogue with us, they just posted in our groups where we don’t want them,” Ross told Inside Higher Ed.

“I’m not saying bad business model or bad idea,” he added. “Just the way they’ve chosen to market themselves -- they’re not doing it in a professional manner; not in a way that establishes trust on behalf of the institutions.”

The founders of URoomSurf have been rebutting charges in the lengthy comment thread, which has accumulated more than 50 posts over several weeks. Another commenter, named “Steven Moseley,” who claims to be a business associate of Gaither and Thibodeau, defended the young entrepreneurs. He said that while the pair might have been somewhat tactless in their dealings with college officials, it was unfair to call them fraudulent.

“I think many of you are prejudging[sic] the company without basis, and as a result LOOKING for a scam,” Moseley wrote.

“Maybe it’s not welcomed by university housing professionals because it does your job for you?” he wrote. “I can certainly understand that one could become defensive if he feels his job is at risk… But stop being closed minded and think of how such tools could HELP your job. Think of how it would improve the dynamic of college housing in general. You won’t have as many transfers. You won’t have people requesting placement with other roommates as often.”

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Comments on Frenemies of Facebook -- II

  • First rule of social networking
  • Posted by Harry Pence , SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor Emeritus at SUNY Oneonta on February 8, 2010 at 8:15am EST
  • The first rule of social marketing is that if you don't develop your own social strategy, someone else will do it for you. The second rule is that you probably won't like what you get.

  • This is a misrepresentation...by definition a FRAUD!
  • Posted by Bob on February 9, 2010 at 8:45am EST
  • "Steven Mosely states...Maybe it’s not welcomed by university housing professionals because it does your job for you?” he wrote. “I can certainly understand that one could become defensive if he feels his job is at risk… But stop being closed minded and think of how such tools could HELP your job."

    1. The college did not ask for your help!
    2. It does not "do the job" as the company has absolutely no authority on any college campus! In fact it will mislead students into thinking that the college's resident life staff was somehow involved and approved of the arrangements. Instead it will "screw up the job" for the college creating a problem not of their own making.
    3. Defensive...well as Freud would say we have a case of projection here.

    Let me give you a comparison from another type of scam that has been running for years.

    The Financial Aid scam is one where an outside company invites students to "fill out their forms" for a fee and then tells the student how much financial aid they are eligible to recieve.

    Imagine the students surprise when they get to campus and the Financial Aid Officer tells them that not only are the numbers wrong, but the outside company has no ties to the college and no authority to tell anyone what type of financial aid a student might recieve. Basically, the student just wasted their money for no reason.

    Your site might be free to the student, but it is still a lie!

  • Posted by Joe on February 9, 2010 at 7:15pm EST
  • Bob,

    The college didn't ask for their help. The students did.

    The students are their market, not the colleges. I think it was a wise choice to approach this as a social networking/tech start-up rather than a sales effort. Only time will tell.

  • Another possible facebook misrepresentation......
  • Posted by Pierre on February 21, 2010 at 4:15pm EST
  • I’m a freshman at Clemson University and I was an administrator of the Class Of 2013 facebook group last year. I’m highly aware of what happened with FacebookGate as the group I was initially in was deleted by facebook because of the college prowler incident.

    This year, someone from Los Angeles who I at first assumed was an accepted student to Clemson approached me with helping me create a group for the Class of 2014. I agree and he promoted the group saying that I ran the group last year and was very knowledgeable about Clemson stuff. The group expanded. One day I logged onto facebook to find that I had been kicked out as the administrator of the 2014 group and had been replaced by 4 people who did not yet have any posts or interactions with the facebook group.

    Shortly afterwards, all sort of posts appeared people (who weren’t necessarily administrators) saying that they had filled out this great survey on URoomSurf and encouraged everybody to join the same. I had a feeling what was going on but was powerless to do anything.

    Yesterday was the final straw for me. I noticed that all the roommate surveys that students had started had been deleted by the administrators and in their place was a new discussion board topic telling everybody to join URoomSurf. I decided to end my involvement with this group and created my own 2014 group where only me and people I know that are legit students here would be the administrators. I’ve also contacted the admissions office to see if anybody in their office would like to help with their effort. However, many incoming students do not know about what happened with the facebook groups and refuse to believe what I am saying about them (since one of the administrators sent out a message to the group members apologizing for deleting the roommate surveys). Also, once I posted something in the group directing people to the new facebook group, I received lots of comments telling me to “chill out” and that they see no problem with what’s going on in the group either (many with suspicious accounts as well). Anyways, that’s what’s going on with the Clemson facebook groups. The administrators have since switched from yesterday and now there’s a whole new group of administrators who have never had any contact with the facebook group (no wall posts, no interaction) yet are not friends with each other.

    If anybody has an idea of what to do, feel free to email me atptong@clemson.edu