Posts Tagged ‘society’

Is social media making the Middle East more ’social’?

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Middle East Social MediaI’ve been a big fan of LinkedIn since I signed up just after it launched in 2004. I immediately found lots of my technology industry friends and colleagues were doing the same and were more than happy to introduce me to their contacts. I spent hours browsing LinkedIn user records looking for useful contacts, business prospects and old friends and over the years LinkedIn’s introduced me to new clients, new staff and other useful new business contacts. However, LinkedIn is a very business-focused social network and, for me, using LinkedIn has always been about business. Moreover, it’s a way of keeping in touch with lots of people, without actually meeting them very often.

For many of us in the Middle East, we started using Twitter this way too. Twitter has been great for following what people are up to and, for the most part, those that we have a business interest in finding out about, learning from or keeping in contact with. In early 2009, when Twitter had just 1,000-2,000 users across the whole region it was the business social network users that were there first (and excited about the prospect of discovering more business contacts!). Well, one year on, things have got a great deal more ’social’. With some 30,000-40,000 Twitter users across the Middle East and North Africa (Spot On’s estimate), there seem to be many more people these days that use Twitter day-to-day for their social lives (read Eman Hussein’s ‘Life without Twitter?’). Tweetups and other offline gatherings have been springing up all over the region, bringing together people with shared interests, introducing new connections and putting faces to Twitter handles.

2010 has already seen tweetups held all over MENA including Jordan, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, plus GeekFestBeirut in Lebanon. These meetups happen for many different reasons at different types of venue, both as public open invite events and private gatherings. GeekFest Beirut, held on Friday February 5th at the Art Lounge in Beirut (see Alexander McNabb’s report on FakePlasticSouks ) drew about 120 people to socialise, talk geek and listen to geek speakers. On the same day in the Sultanate of Oman, 45 tweeps gathered at Muscat’s Indian Embassy to meet visiting Indian Minister of State for External Affairs Dr. Shashi Tharoor (@ShashiTharoor on Twitter, read Digital Oman for a full report), who now seems to have penciled in a Dubai tweetup for sometime in the near future. On Saturday January 30th a group of more than 30 Jordanian Twitter users met at Wild Jordan in Jabal Amman to meet ‘the faces behind the tweeps’ (see full report on Under My Olive Tree) and there have been at least two more Amman tweetups since! Meanwhile, more than twenty tweeps met at the Riyadh Tweetup on February 2nd. Organisers are now looking at bigger venues to hold a Riyadh Tweetup on the first Monday of every month.

As one of the volunteer organisers for the first Twestival Dubai held in February 2009 (by the way the next Twestival Dubai takes place on March 25th), which followed a month after the first ‘big’ tweetup in Dubai organised by @rida, I remember the air of mystery that used to surround organising a tweetup. Many were unsure of the etiquette (or twettiquette!) involved in hosting a tweetup. Many, also, were used to keeping ‘online friends’ and ‘real friends’ compartmentalised, never mixing the two, and never meeting the former! Now is seems Twitter has helped bring the walls down and people are more comfortable inviting people to an event over Twitter than they are over the telephone. People are inviting other people that they would normally have considered to be ’strangers’ to meet and socialise all over the region, making new contacts and yes, even friends.

Life without Twitter?

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

Over the weekend, I was lost in the dark rainy Al Quoz area trying to get to a gallery where 8 short plays were being staged by Dubai Drama Group in celebration of its 25th anniversary. While driving in circles looking for a lit up sign that says The JamJar, my mind wandered to a different place away from the big warehouses and big machinery and I thought: how would my weekend have been without Twitter?

On Thursday night, I got a tweet from @shelo9 and @mich1mich saying they’re heading to @wildpeeta (of course!) – amazing shawarma, hunger, and the need to be around smart and interesting people drove me there. And that was my Thursday night; all about good conversations, good tweets and definitely a nice shawarma for dinner!

On Friday morning, I was trying to set up a router for my wireless network. Of course, the last thing you expect a Luddite like me to do on her Friday. I was tweeting to people via my mobile (those who were awake then) to help out and it was a step-by-step process, or rather a tweet-by-tweet process, until I got my wireless in place and my thanks went back to all who were helping from my new wireless network! Hurray!

Saturday was the most interesting of all, I finally made it to The JamJar gallery and managed to catch the last 10 minutes of the play written by @Hajer13, sadly missing @PurpleNano’s part. However, I was happy to watch the next play where @Hajer13 was the leading actress (and she rocked by the way!). After that, I headed to MOE where DIFF is taking place. I would never have had the chance to watch the long anticipated movie Amreeka if @mich1mich hadn’t mentioned that she had an extra ticket. So, Saturday night ended with a great movie with great tweeps that I met (to name few: @nagham, @esperanca, @tomgara and @mita56 – shame she couldn’t make it in!)

So, if I had to rewrite the above taking out the Twitter factor I’d be left with ermm… probably nothing! This blog post also reminds me that I have to admit to @PKGulati that he was right and I was wrong! We had a conversation about the objective of Twitter a few months ago at the Irish Village. As he said, the aim of Twitter is not to have virtual acquaintances but to build connections on a professional, and why not, on a personal level too!

My life without Twitter? I wouldn’t even dare to imagine! In a town like Dubai, formerly known as one of the loneliest places in the world to be single, people are meeting like minded people, talking in new ways and opening up dialogue that otherwise would never have happened. And yes, I’m a Twitter addict and you all know it.