Facebook is tweaking your News Feed
This image, provided by Facebook, shows how an older but popular post could be moved up in a user's News Feed.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Facebook is tweaking your News Feed to put popular older posts back on top
- On an average day, people only see 300 of the 1,500 posts from their friends and pages
- Your most recent likes, comments and other actions determine what posts you see
- Facebook: "This update does a better job of showing people the stories they want to see"
The company on Tuesday announced a tweak
to its News Feed that will take a popular story -- one that's getting
lots of comments and likes -- and put it back at the top of your feed to
make sure you don't miss it.
On a typical day, the
average Facebook user is only seeing 20% of the posts from friends and
pages that he or she follows. Where are the rest? Filtered out by
Facebook, using algorithms it has developed to determine the stories and
posts the social network thinks you'll care about most.
Now Facebook has decided
to shed some light on the mysterious decisions that go into ranking the
stories in the news feed. People have grumbled in the past about not
having a pure, kitchen-sink feed of all their friends' updates, so the
company is explaining a little about how it does what it does.
To figure out what posts
to show, Facebook looks at a person's most recent everyday actions such
as liking, sharing or hiding posts, the amount of interaction they have
with people or pages, and a post's popularity among their group of
friends.
Facebook displayed
updates differently in the past. The social media site was once a
chronologically ordered feed of all the things posted by friends and
pages. But then its number of users soared -- now more than 1 billion --
and over time, most users collected so many connections that their
bloated feeds became unwieldy.
On an average day,
Facebook says you have about 1,500 posts from friends and pages you
follow. But only about 300 of those appear in your feed. Facebook thinks
showing all 1,500 stories would be overwhelming, and that people would
miss important posts in that flood of updates.
The company did some
tests and found that people read, comment and like fewer posts when
faced with the entire unfiltered stream. Even with the shorter, ranked
news feeds, people only read an average of 57% of the posts.
With the new tweak, older
posts can resurface and the amount of stories read jumps to 70%,
Facebook said. It also resulted in a 5% increase in likes, comments and
shares on the resurrected posts from friends, and 8% increase in the
same activity for posts from pages, it said.
"The data suggests that
this update does a better job of showing people the stories they want to
see, even if they missed them the first time," Facebook said in a blog
post.
For a price, you can
ensure that your posts are among the chosen stories in your friends'
streams. In an attempt to profit from the system, Facebook launched a
feature last year that lets people pay to promote
their own posts. The price varies depending on your location and how
many people will see the post, but it ensures your link or update won't
get buried by an algorithm.
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