Jonathan Richards
The man, the films, those blondes. Free DVD collection starting this Sunday
Facebook, the UK's most popular social networking site, has suffered its first monthly drop in visitor numbers, according to figures published today.
After 17 successive months of increasing its monthly audience in the UK, Facebook suffered a 5 per cent dip in visitors between December and January - from 8.9 million to 8.5 million.
In January, Facebook's audience was still 712 per cent greater than in the same month last year, and up 10 per cent on the previous quarter, but the figures will nonetheless represent a blow to the firm, which has enjoyed a meteoric rise in subscriber numbers since becoming widely available in late 2006.
Facebook, which has become popular with a professional audience both as a way of sharing content as well as hunting for job opportunities, was not the only social networking site to suffer, however.
MySpace, the UK's second most popular site in the category, also fell 5 per cent to 5 million, while Bebo, the third largest, dropped 2 per cent to 4.1 million, according to figures published by Nielsen Online.
In the past 12 months, several of the top ten networking sites have found that their visitors have deserted them. Networks on Yahoo! and Google-owned sites experienced falls of 16 per cent and 30 per cent respectively, while Piczo, a site specifically targeting teenagers, lost 56 per cent of its audience - suggesting that 2008 may be a year in which a general 'malaise' about social networking sets in.
"Facebook was never going to be able to carry on growing the way it has, and a lot of people - especially those who've been using it heavily - are now starting to get Facebook fatigue," Alex Burmaster, an internet analyst at Nielsen Online said.
"I think when something explodes like that a lot of people check it out because they feel they should, but while getting alerts about what your friends are up to is exciting for a time, that's inevitably going to die down."
Mr Burmaster said that the broader social networking sites would plateau this year, and that growth would come in niche sites, which were more sustainable because audiences tended to more highly engaged in subjects that were close to them.
He cited the example of WAYN (Where Are You Now), a travel networking site whose UK audience has grown 25 per cent in the past year to 461,000, and LinkedIn, the professional network, which jumped from 161,000 to 433,000.
Rebecca Jennings, an analyst at Forrester, said it wasn't surprising that Facebook's audience had dropped slightly because the surge of media interest in the site last year had led to many registrations by people who were never likely to use it in the long term.
She added that the figures only represented one month, and while social networking was "no longer in the heady days" of double or triple digit growth, sites like Facebook still had the potential to increase their audiences - both in the UK and in less developed markets.
Mr Nielsen added that the drop in Facebook's numbers between December and January could not be attributed to a lull in communication as people recover from the excesses of the Christmas season.
In the same period last year, MySpace's audience grew by 4 per cent, and Facebook's by 3 per cent, he said.
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Times Online's new TV show helps you make the right decisions for your pet
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles

Get Times news, business and sport on your mobile. Text Times to 86626



Overseas contacts and local business information

Our Credit Clinic has free help and advice
2007
£47,700
2007
£41,899
2008
£41,445
Great car insurance deals online
£33,000
Macmillan Cancer Support
Central/South West
£50k
NHS
Nationwide
£
£30k OTE
Meltwater News
Nationwide
100K
Confidential
London
5% below developer pre-launch price!
Luxury Appts, beautiful gardens w/ Thames views
Great Homes Available on a shared Ownership Basis
Great Investment, River Views
By Funway – Thailand
from £589pp
Christmas Cruises
From only £995pp
APTs East Coast now from only
£2425pp.
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Globrix Property Search - find property for sale and rent in the UK. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
I started using facebook a year ago, and to be frank I lost hours of my free time checking on my friend's profile, snooping around and adding applications.
I enjoyed keeping in touch with all the friends I lost touch with, but at one point it all became tiring, facebook made me feel insecure, even though I had my privacy set to maximum. My relationship ended over a facebook e-mail, my friendship with the same person collapsed coz she deleted me willingly from her freinds' list claiming it would have been for my own sake not checking on her profile every day.
Funny coz I even installed PROFILE WATCHER-to know who is snooping around.
DELETE from friends' list is not just a delete from facebook. I felt extremely hurt by my friend's action, and suffer emotionally to this day.I got off facebook, I just hope I will be resistant enough not to get back.
That social website has become igrown in our social lives,now it's our BIG FRIEND letting us watch...
kathryn , London, UK
I use Facebook less, because I use Twitter more...
as an aside, I'd say to emily in Cornwall that in no way can you describe February as "summer's almost here"!
Steve Ellwood, Cromarty,
Most of Facebook's fun appeal came from the apps that are written for it. What has annoyed me about it lately is that every app seems to require you (chain-letter virus like) to send it to al least 20 of your friends before you can even see what it does. At that point I usually back out and remove it.
Graeme, London,
I use Facebook to keep in touch with friends, and it's great for looking up people I've lost contact with. I have a bare minimum of information on it, and don't put up anything I would consider sensitive. I'm therefore not worried about skeletons in my closet.
However, I also use it strictly in my own time, and get very tired indeed of the constant spamming - because that's what it is - by any cretin who wants to compare lists of all-time top movies. I think this may be one of the factors in the drop-off rate, as the endless application nonsense gets extremely wearisome.
Paul, Chichester, UK
could be something to do with the 30+ emails you recieve each day telling you that sombodys just posted (what will probably be a chain letter, telling me bits of my body would rot and fall off if i didn't forward to 10 million other friends etc.) on your fun wall, just kinda gets a little irritating after a day or two
keith, chester, uk
Facebook has just opened in spanish, so that's a different half of the world to go conquer. Least till the Chinese version opens.
Vanessa, Chachapoyas, Perú
It has gotten really boring and after only 4 months, I no longer care what all my facebook friends are up to, which quizzes they scored highly in and what their status is. I think these kind of sites tned to do well in the winter months when people can't socialize as much. Now that summer's almost here, I'd rather go out and meet my friends in person.
emily, Cornwall, UK
It was interesting at the beginning,but now it became absolutely boring.
Tanya, London,
I, for one, am less likely to make full use of Facebook since it was highlighted that there is potential for employers to use it to snoop about applicants' private lives, which could result in them being turned down for jobs. I wonder how many other students are also worried by this.
It's a shame, because Facebook is a fantastic facility for online presence and social networking.
Amanda, Warwick, UK
To be honest I have only ever used it for playing Scrabble
YR, Cambs,
Used by a bunch of saddoes in an attempt, once again, to be 'cool'.
John, London,
I think the drop in figures may be down to the fact that people were logging into Facebook during office hours, IT departments have twigged, blocked the site and therefore those who don't have internet access at home have had no choice but to abandon the addiction altogether. Myself included.
Ellie B, Hebden Bridge, England