05 April
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How Facebook Finds The Best Design Talent, And Keeps Them Happy

If you take a close look at Facebook’s S-1 registration statement, you’ll notice something striking: Designers are called out as key to the company’s longterm strategic success.

Editor’s Note

See Facebook’s biggest design hires, in the slideshow above.

Tech company filings often call out certain job functions—like engineering—and the organization’s ability ability to fill those position as crucial to its success. But designers? That’s almost unheard of. And yet, there they are. In the section titled “Factors Affecting Our Performance,” Facebook’s filing reads: “We have also made and intend to make acquisitions with the primary objective of adding software engineers, product designers, and other personnel with certain technology expertise.” And in the section titled “Competition,” it says, “We compete to attract and retain highly talented individuals, especially software engineers, designers, and product managers.” (Emphasis added in both cases.)

Facebook says they’ve only scratched the surface of their roadmap.

The mentions underline the importance (little-noticed until now) that Facebook places on its design team. In a story on that team, which ran in the April issue of Fast Company, VP of product Chris Cox and others told the magazine how the company is looking to its right-brainers to help them do something that’s essentially never been done in software before: Design interfaces that catalyze emotions, rather than simply enable users to accomplish tasks.

Chris Cox

Designing for Facebook, Cox said, gets at “the science of things you can’t reason about, that you just feel.” He added: “That’s why, when we’re trying to accomplish something that’s pretty new, it’s important to be iterating in that design mindset.”

That mindset is only going to become increasingly important. Facebook executives say they’ve only scratched the surface of their roadmap. As a result, the company’s been on a hiring tear, tracking down and convincing some of the tech world’s brightest design talent to join the company, including, most recently, the team at Gowalla (brought in via an acquisition) and Elizabeth Windram, a former staff designer at Google who was snatched away from Quora just months after she joined that company.

CLICK ABOVE FOR OUR SLIDESHOW OF FACEBOOK’S NOTABLE DESIGN HIRES

Notably, tracking down the right people and persuading them to join the team is so important that Facebook doesn’t leave the job to HR alone. “We started keeping a dream team list about two-and-a-half years ago,” Director of Design Kate Aronowitz tells Co.Design. “We thought, ‘What if we could assemble all these people in one room?’”

Nicholas Felton and Kate Aronowitz, Facebook’s Director of Design.

The design team themselves maintain Facebook Group called Design Recruiting (yes, the company uses the site as one of its core productivity tools) that team members fill up with the names and portfolios of designers they admire. And Aronowitz says she herself regularly cuddles up with an iPhone or iPad before bed, surfing through a series of apps, looking for flashes of genius.

Members of the design team reach out to targets themselves, meeting up with them at conferences or inviting them out for dinner or drinks, both to test for fit (“see if our values line up and see if we get excited about the same things,” Aronowitz says) and to make the case for joining Facebook.

The design team reaches out to targets themselves. For some, Facebook brings out the big guns.

For some targets, Facebook even brings out the big guns. Both Nicholas Felton, the information designer behind the wildly popular Feltron Annual Reports, and Mike Matas, who worked on the original iPhone and then cofounded Push Pop Press, which created the Apple Award-winning tablet book version of Our Choice, Al Gore’s follow-up to An Inconvenient Truth, got personal invitations from the main man himself, CEO Mark Zuckerberg. (The email Felton saw in his inbox was so casual that at first, he tells Co.Design, he thought it was just a message from Zuckerberg to all Facebook users.)

That email led to a visit to Facebook headquarters for then-New York-based Felton and his partner Ryan Case. Zuckerberg took them on a a walk through the leafy Palo Alto neighborhood where the company was located at the time. He asked them what they were hoping to do with Daytum and talked about his own visions for Facebook. (Matas tells a similar story, of how an initial invitation from Zuckerberg to come talk about Push Pop Press led, several months later, to a formal offer to join the company.)

For all the outreach Facebook does, the bar to actually getting in the door remains high. “I only hire about one out of every hundred portfolios I look at,” Aronowitz told a group of designers at an event at Dave McClure’s 500 Startups last winter.

Facebook isn’t looking for your run-of-the-mill “pixel pusher.” When we meet at Facebook headquarters, Aronowitz ticks off three qualities she looks for: A personal vision (about what the world needs or where design is going), a sense of ownership over the projects they work on, and a “builder” mindset. “We’re looking for people who can say, ‘I have a product idea, I can think through a need, I can think through a customer base, build something, ship it, and then iterate based on how it’s being used.’”

I only hire about one out of every hundred portfolios I look at.

That’s because once they get to Facebook, designers don’t sit in a corner and wait for people to toss requirements at them. Rather, they enjoy an unusually high level of involvement in the product, starting at the very beginning as executives and product leads discuss what they should build. “Here, the designers will be in almost every conversation about their product,” Aronowitz says.

The designers’ involvement is so deep that they often partner with product managers to lead feature teams. Sometimes they even take the lead on their own.

Sofa, the firm that created ingenious apps like this one, was bought outright by Facebook. The team now works on polishing the site’s icons and visual elements.

Last year, for example, we wrote about how Rob Mason, a fresh-faced young graduate from England, with little more than a few Facebook apps under his belt, was handed responsibility for the Skype integration barely moments after he’d walked in the door. “Go figure out what the experience of doing video calls on Facebook should be,” he was told. He spent a few months tinkering around with it and eventually threw out the book on historical video chat conventions, coming up instead with something simple, straightforward, and so easy to use that, as one of the designers said at the time, even his mom could figure it out.

When the designers they hire are particularly good–when the company believes in their own unique genius–the company gives them free reign to come up with their own portfolio. When Matas joined Facebook last year with his Push Pop cofounder Kimon Tsinteris, for example, the two were given an office and told to think about what new features and products they thought Facebook should be doing next.

“If you can hire people that are good,” Cox explains, “you’re crazy to not give them the chance to set up the definition of what they’re doing.”

And not to keep them close. Both Zuckerberg and Cox spend the bulk their days in product meetings, working cheek-by-jowl with designers and product managers, hammering out the company’s next feature sets.

In the old Palo Alto campus, the company’s designers were parked in the same giant, open-plan room where Zuckerberg, Cox, and the company’s other top executives sat. The new Menlo Park campus has nine buildings and room for 3,200 people. And still, the designers were put not just in the same building, but on the same floor—just one open-plan space over—as Zuckerberg and Cox, all of which facilitates the impromptu executive-designer desk-side conversations and hallway conferences that employees say is one of the keys to the company moving fast and generating breakthrough ideas.

“Design is more strategic than ever,” Aronowitz says. “Designers who come to Facebook have a massive scale of audience and a pretty big impact.”

Portraits by Jake Stangel for Fast Company.

Via FastCoDesign: http://www.fastcodesign.com/

09 February
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Be Like Mark: 8 Ways To Emulate Facebook’s Zuckerberg, The Unlikely Leader

Whether you love him, hate him, or are just a little jealous of his newly-minted multi-billionaire status, you have to admit that Mark Zuckerberg, founder and CEO of Facebook, has made some visionary leadership moves.

In less than 10 years, Zuckerberg’s taken an idea for an online social network from his Harvard dorm room and delivered it into the homes, offices, pockets, and purses (via mobile phones) of 845 million users around the world. Last year, more than half Facebook’s users logged in every single day, spending a whopping 4 hours and 35 minutes posting, reading updates and “liking” more than 2 billion posts a day.

And how many CEOs anywhere in the world can say the company they founded before they were old enough to drink generated a net income of $1 billion in 2011 on revenue of $3.7 billion, up from $606 million on revenues of $1.97 billion in 2010?

Zuckerberg’s had his share of growing pains, too, but he’s held fast to Facebook’s helm as well as its stock. He currently owns 28.4% of the company, which at a valuation of $100 billion, translates to a stake worth just under $30 billion.

Despite that dough, less than 10% of Americans relished the thought of walking the halls of Facebook in his sneakers, and even fewer (9% to be precise) wanted to work for him.

As Facebook takes its first steps under the glaring klieg lights of its planned public offering, you can be sure Zuckerberg’s management moves will be subject to even more scrutiny, dissection, and criticism. For now though, we want to take a look at the leadership qualities that brought on this dizzying success.

Have A Strong Personal Philosophy

Amid the astounding numbers of revenue and users, and the cast of characters that reads like an A-list index to the high-roller investors of the tech world, the S-1 document that Facebook filed yesterday also held the personal manifesto Zuckerberg plans to use as a guide for the company after the IPO.

“We don’t build services in order to make money, we make money in order to build better services. Facebook was not originally created to be a company. It was built to accomplish a social mission–to make the world open and more connected.”

Zuck’s trotted out this “open and connected” tenet at various times, most recently in an impassioned post on Facebook opposing SOPA and PIPA. “We will continue to oppose any laws that will hurt the Internet,” and with equal furor in a rebuttal to the FTC touting how much social media has contributed to the government, the advancement of democracy, and the growing cottage industry of social software.

Make It Not Always About The Money

Naysayers were quick to wag tongues and fingers when Zuckerberg turned down Yahoo’s nearly $1 billion offer to buy Facebook in 2006. But the decision to keep Facebook independent was far from a lapse in judgment. In less than two years, MySpace accepted $580 million to join News Corp., and YouTube took $1.5 billion from Google.

As valuations fluctuated between $10 billion and $1 trillion, Zuckerberg stuck to his simple resolution. He’d consider an IPO when it “made sense” rather than make himself and investors rich. “I’m here to build something for the long term. Anything else is a distraction.” Even Cameron Winklevoss agreed.

Know How To Scale In Multiple Ways

Zuckerberg recognized early on that scaling a business was a balancing act. Now topping 845 million members, there’s only so many more users Facebook can add to its base. Instead, he’s focused on increasing the amount of time people spend clicking around the network, so it can serve up even more ads at higher rates.

This scheme has already been in play with a number of Facebook’s features such as games and shopping. Though not all of have been successful (hello, FB email service) it’s clear that the bottom line gets a boost the longer users are on the site.

focus at facebook

Support A Culture Of Innovation

Zuckerberg worked with only a handful of developers in the early days of Facebook but when the “snakepit” of angst-ridden, overworked staff got to be counterproductive, he made some important additions. Chris Cox became the evangelical HR executive while newly-installed COO Sheryl Sandberg ushered in an era of stability in 2008.

Things still retain the playful air of a tech development hive, but with an edge. At its HQ, male Facebook employees vanquish distractions even when they go to the bathroom (which is frequently, thanks to all those free beverages).

Recognize You Don’t Have To Be First To Market

Myspace and Friendster both predate Facebook, yet are now virtually extinct. Facebook trumped those earlier social networks because it provides more of a compelling pull, rather than a push. Likewise, when it entered the deals game last year alongside veterans Groupon and LivingSocial, it took their existing model and did it one better by adding polls and encouraging users to share. All of that fits with Facebook’s core mission, “Giving people the power to share and make the world more open and connected.”

Take Pride In Hacking

For Zuckerberg, hacking goes way beyond the allegations that he coded his way into the Harvard Crimson and ConnectU. Zuckerberg’s hacker culture is about using shared effort and knowledge to make something bigger, better, and faster than an individual can do alone. His “hackathons” at Facebook are legendary and help foster innovation in all manner of projects from building better data centers to crowdsourcing urban planning for its surrounding neighborhood.

 

Play To Win, Without Competing

Zuckerberg’s social-networking juggernaut is the smallest and youngest of Silicon Valley’s Fab Four, but it’s killing it with stellar results in the ad business and attracting all kinds of talent. The Great Tech War of 2012 may be on, but Zuck’s not going to play. “People like to talk about war…There are real competitions in there, but I don’t think this is going to be this type of situation where there’s one company that wins all this stuff.”

Let Them See You Sweat

Between his awkward, perspiration-soaked appearance at D8 last year and presentations peppered with hesitant “ums,“ it’s no wonder Zuckerberg’s drawn fire for his lack of polish for such a loftily-placed CEO. No matter, he’s still smarter and more successful than the rest of us, which sets him in a league of his own.

Now it’s your turn. What leadership lessons have you taken from Mark Zuckerberg? Tweet us @FastCoLeaders with the hashtag #FCweighin to join the conversation, or leave a comment below.

Read the rest of Fast Company’s coverage of Facebook’s IPO

Image: Flickr user dfarber

Via Fast Company: http://www.fastcompany.com

05 December
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Harvard Opens Startup Incubator

 

Mark Zuckerberg’s alma mater is hedging its bets to find the next hot entrepreneur (and the next Facebook) with the opening of the Harvard Innovation Lab, an incubator designed for startup-hungry students on campus.

The i-lab, as it is known by abbreviation, began as a response to Boston Mayor Thomas Menino’s desire to introduce more innovation spaces Boston. “Let our legacy to each other be launching pads for those who follow,” Menino said in his January 2010 inaugural address PDF. “Let us show the world that in Boston, history is just a prelude.”

The city’s Ivy League school took up the task, and the i-lab’s Nov. 18 opening offered the promise of raising the next generation of startup CEOs right. The building itself not only includes classrooms for study and academic research, but also large meeting rooms available for co-working and project development for the students. But that is only the tip of the iceberg; the engine behind the i-lab is its strong partnerships with local business associations such as the Massachusetts Small Business Development Center Network, which will provide for one-on-one coaching, workshops and training with a community of mentors.

The space even bears Zuckerberg’s stamp of approval. When the Facebook CEO (and Harvard dropout) visited the campus in early Nov. to recruit for his company, he made sure to check out all of the i-lab’s features.

Do you think an incubator will make young talent shine brighter? Or is independent bootstrapping what startups are all about? Let us know in the comments.

Image courtesy of, Harvard News

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

09 October
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Mark Zuckerberg Killed a Bison

Keeping with his commitment to only eat what he kills, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg shot and killed a bison for food.

Questions about Zuckerberg killing a bison began to surface during his f8 keynote last week. During his presentation, one box on his Timeline profile displayed that he was cooking bison burgers. This naturally raised a question with many audience members: did Zuckerberg kill a bison?

The answer is apparently yes, he did kill a bison. According to Fortune, Zuckerberg recently obtained a hunting license and killed the bison now featured on his Facebook Timeline.

“Yeah, he killed a bison,” one of our sources told us, confirming Fortune‘s report.

Let’s be clear, though: Zuckerberg isn’t killing bison and other animals for sport. He’s doing it in order to be healthier and be responsible about the food he eats. We in the media may make jokes about Zuckerberg killing bison, but the truth is that his new dietary commitment is built on good intentions.

Besides, how many of us can say we’ve killed a bison? I certainly can’t.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

06 October
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Facebook Changes in a Nutshell COMIC

Facebook’s profound changes, outlined last week, are leaving many users scrambling to catch up.

But, as the comic above points out, we’ve been through this before. Whatever the outcry this time, chances are things will settle down within a short time.

What do you think? Will we get used to the new Facebook in three weeks? Or has Mark Zuckerberg gone too far this time? Let us know in the comments.

Comic courtesy of Endless Origami

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

02 September
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Mark Zuckerberg isn’t Mark Zuckerberg

“Mark Zuckerberg” has become a codeword for the truly gifted exception, the wunderkind freak of nature for whom traditional rules don’t apply.

Well, sure, Mark Zuckerberg can drop out of Harvard, but you’re not Mark Zuckerberg…

Here’s the thing: Even Mark isn’t Mark Zuckerberg.

This notion that there’s a one in a billion alignment of DNA and experience that magically creates an exception is just total nonsense. Mark is successful because of a million small choices, not because he, and he alone, has some magical properties.

Mostly, the best way to be the next Mark Zuckerberg is to make difficult choices.

By Seth Godin: http://sethgodin.typepad.com/

24 March
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Meet Mark Zuckerberg: the Action Figure PICS

Aside from poking, Mark Zuckerberg isn’t known for much physical activity, but that hasn’t stopped a company from creating an action figure of the Facebook co-founder.

MIC, which introduced a Steve Jobs action figure in November, is now selling a Zuckerberg doll for $69.90. Why? The company says this is the “next greatest action figure for tech nerds” and that the company (whose name stands for “Made in China”) “really admired the man who is responsible for connecting over 500 million people across the world, helping Egypt’s protesters to spark an uprising and becoming the youngest billionaire and Time ‘Person of the Year.’”

Modeled closely on the real-life Facebook CEO, the 7-inch doll sports a casual brown hoodie sweatshirt, worn-in jeans and open-toed Adidas sandals. The doll is said to be heavier than an iPhone, but lighter than an iPad. It also comes with a stand with a Facebook logo, a “like” and “poke” card for Zuck to hold and speech bubbles where the user can write their own witty messages. (The blog suggests “I’m CEO, bitch!”)

MIC isn’t the first to see heroic potential in Zuck. Last month, a Canadian publisher, Bluewater Productions, introduced a comic book based on Zuckerberg, who of course, was the unwilling subject of one of 2010’s most-lauded films, The Social Network.

For his part, Zuckerberg seems to be making an effort lately to humanize his image, with an appearance on Saturday Night Live, an interview with 60 Minutes and, just this week, a Facebook Page devoted to his new puppy, Beast.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

28 January
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Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook Fan Page Hacked

Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook fan page seems to have been hacked, with the hacker posting a message calling on the company to transform into a “social business”.

The message, seemingly posted on Facebook from Mark Zuckerberg’s account, was quickly removed (together with the fan page), but not quickly enough to go by unnoticed, receiving over 1800 likes and hundreds of comments in the process.

The message read: “Let the hacking begin: If facebook needs money, instead of going to the banks, why doesn’t Facebook let its users invest in Facebook in a social way? Why not transform Facebook into a ‘social business’ the way Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus described it? LINK What do you think? #hackercup2011″

Facebook made no statement about the incident, but if Zuckerberg’s fan page was indeed hacked, it’s a big deal. If the Facebook CEO (more accurately, the PR team who’s handling the page for him) can’t keep his Facebook account safe from intruders, who can?

We’ve reached out to Facebook about the incident and will update the post when we hear back.

via TechCrunch

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

06 June
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Facebook’s Insignia and the Company’s Ultimate Mission

Earlier this week, Mark Zuckerberg took the stage of the D8 Conference to discuss privacy, his role as CEO, and the stupid things he did in college. There were many uncomfortable moments in his Q&A with co-hosts Kara Wisher and Walt Mossberg (it wasn’t pretty), but the oddest moment of the entire interview came from his sweater.

Yes, Mark Zuckerberg’s trademark hoodie stole the show. After Kara Swisher suggested that he take it off, a circular insignia (pictured above) was revealed on the inside of the hoodie. Who knew Facebook’s CEO has been wearing the “Facebook Mission Seal” all this time?

Based on pictures taken at the conference, SFWeekly was able to reconstruct the insignia. It’s a rather elegant but intricate design. Here’s a brief breakdown of what it means:

- The insignia is broken down into three parts: Graph, Stream, and Platform. Graph refers to the Social Graph (and Facebook’s Open Graph initiative), Stream represents the flow of information and status updates between users, and Platform represents the Facebook Platform.

- The arrows on the insignia go in both directions, signifying that sharing and openness doesn’t go in one direction.

- “Making the World More Open and Connected” is the unofficial mission statement of Facebook.


Facebook’s Ultimate Mission


The insignia is perhaps more telling than anything Zuckerberg said during his time at D8 this week. In 2010, Facebook is dedicated to opening up the entire world and connecting as many people together as possible, utilizing the Open Graph, the Stream, and the Facebook Platform.

The mission has definitely transformed over the years. In 2004, it was simply “an online directory that connects people through social networks at colleges.” In 2007, it was this:

“Facebook is a social utility that helps people communicate more efficiently with their friends, family and coworkers. The company develops technologies that facilitate the sharing of information through the social graph, the digital mapping of people’s real-world social connections.”

In 2008, it became a tool that “helps you connect and share with the people in your life.” In 2009, pieces of the current mission began to surface. Here was Facebook’s mission in 2009:

“Facebook gives people the power to share and make the world more open and connected.”

What can we conclude from this evolution? Facebook is becoming more and more ambitious, transforming from a simple network for your friends to a utility to make the world more open and connected.

Despite the privacy fiasco, don’t expect the world’s largest social network to relent from its path. It intends to keep opening up the platform and connecting the web through its platform and the new Open Graph. Only by doing this will Zuckerberg and his team succeed in becoming the central connection of the entire world.

Is Zuckerberg wearing the insignia under his hoodie bizarre? Yes, but perhaps not to him. You can bet that he believes in the mission statement with every fiber of his being, and nothing — not even a bad performance at D8 — is going to stand in his way.



By Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

03 June
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Mark Zuckerberg on Privacy and the Stupid Things He Did in College

At the D8 Conference outside of Los Angeles, another well-known tech CEO was grilled on stage: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

Yesterday, Steve Jobs took the stage and was hit hard with questions on Adobe Flash, the lost next-generation iPhone and Facebook’s increasing competition with Google.

AllThingsD producers Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher definitely didn’t let up the 26-year-old founder. They questioned him on the recent privacy fiasco, instant personalization, his past at Harvard, and his future as CEO of the web’s most important companies.


The Privacy Backlash


Swisher and Mossberg wasted no time digging into the big issue: Facebook and privacy. Zuckerberg started by making it clear that “privacy is very important to us.” He says that Facebook isn’t out to make all of their users’ information public — that’s a misperception. In fact, he drilled deeper, saying that they never changed people’s privacy settings, they just suggested settings where some information is left public.

It didn’t take long for Mossberg and Swisher to turn up the heat, though. Mossberg asked Facebook’s CEO why he’s making people take extra steps to protect their information. Zuckerberg eventually responded that people still have control over their Facebook information, and more than half of the userbase has changed privacy settings at one point, demonstrating that most users understand the privacy tools.

That wasn’t the end of the privacy discussion, though. Much of the conversation became Mossberg and Swisher trying to get answers to one question, but Zuckerberg finding ways to dodge. There was no straight answer from Zuckerberg about why Facebook Instant Personalization was opt-out instead of opt-in. Most likely, we’ll never get one.


Zuckerberg the Kid, Zuckerberg the CEO


There was a lot of focus on Zuckerberg himself during his time on stage. Swisher asked Facebook’s CEO how he felt about the backlash against him and whether he has been accurately portrayed to the rest of the world. His response began with his telling Swisher that he “did a lot of stupid things” when he was in college, and that he doesn’t intend to make excuses for it. He was likely referring to IMs that recently surfaced that took a less-than-serious attitude towards privacy.

More of the focus was on Zuckerberg as the 26-year-old CEO of Facebook. He discussed how it is his job not to make the same mistakes of his competitors, although he once again dodged the actual question (“Who are your competitors in this space?”). He reiterated that he intends to be CEO of Facebook when it goes public, although he wouldn’t reveal when that would happen. Given his tight control over the Facebook Board of Directors, it’s tough to find a scenario where he would be forced out.

As with many of his interviews, Zuckerberg focused less on himself and more on generalities, such as his focus on building a great team and having a clear direction for the company. He didn’t seem to think of himself as the CEO of one of the world’s most important companies, but just the leader of a team that shares his values.

Overall, Zuckerberg likes to talk about the topics that interest him — the social graph, building great products, etc. — and he avoided answering the uncomfortable questions about privacy, controversies, and IPOs. Still, we give him credit for going on the stage of D8 at all.


By Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

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