Obermutten and Facebook: using global reach for local stories

Have you heard of the village of Obermutten? It’s a village of less than 100 people in the mountains of Switzerland. If you become a fan of their Facebook Page, they’ll print out your profile picture and put it on their town notice board*.

Or in the local barn.

Or on the houses in the village.

Because there isn’t enough room on the noticeboard.

Because there are 13,000 fans. And its still growing.

When I first heard of the Facebook Page, I’d seen this YouTube video – showing that this tiny village’s Facebook Page had higher engagement rates than the Lady Gaga and Coca Cola Facebook Pages. While their Fan page is still relatively small on the scale of things, smaller pages often struggle to get any interactions at all.


I decided to check out the page and see just why this page was so popular – beyond the novelty of being frozen in time on a noticeboard on the other side of the world – and the answer is simple.

It’s honest.

Unashamedly, the townspeople share snippets of their world. My favourite posts have included updates from the townspeople making a video of recent fog, there is a post dedicated to the town dog, and the Mayor’s daughter knitted a scarf for a Facebook Fan. Between these updates are posts of the villagers attaching photos of their Facebook Fans across the town and updates of how many fans they have – including posts when they have fans from a new continent or country.

Obermutten GR dog 300x214 Obermutten and Facebook: using global reach for local stories

Obermutten Town Dog. Image Source: http://on.fb.me/tVfRrH

When you scroll right to the first post, the first update rather charmingly says “test”, followed by the Mayor (I think!) opening the Facebook Page officially. The page is learning to walk as it goes along and it certainly doesn’t have any grand plan. However, that is the most refreshing part about it. Facebook Pages often feel so commercial that this kind of community is pretty rare. Other examples of similar real-world communities drawing on the masses of Facebook (such as “Rename the town of Speed to SpeedKills“) feel far more orchestrated, even if the same strong community exists in both towns.

One of the most interesting aspects is that the Page posts each updated translated into  multiple languages – sometimes very roughly! Responses come from all over the globe, in every language, which evidently not all of which can be appreciated. One Danish article discussing the town’s social media efforts was posted on the Wall; met with the response of “Thank you for this link. Unfortunately, we can’t understand it, but we can read a lot of times “Obermutten”! Kind regards and see you soon.”

So what makes the Page so popular? I can’t really put my finger on it – but it might simply be curiosity of how this town lives. The Facebook Page of Obermutten almost feels like a transference of the genre of reality television: this is a town letting us into their world, into their lives. And it feels pretty damn special.

I do wonder if this is the start of a new realm of tourism: where towns begin telling their stories in real time. What do you think?

*Yes. I know you want to know. I am also on the town noticeboard in Obermutten. ;)

noticeboard 1 Obermutten and Facebook: using global reach for local stories

 

 

 

Status Updates: let's stop lying

What if we all started being a little more honest in our status updates?
We all know the drill: untag the bad photo, check-in to that cute bar, never post an update on those days when you cant stop crying and all you want to eat is chicken.

We often only share our stories that are positive online. We don’t share the things that hurt us, or scare us: the ramifications of which, I think, are are Stepford society. Everyone is happy and successful. Except us. And no one can relate to us when we have problems: because everyone is happy. We become frustrated and angry when we feel emotions like depression and frustration because we feel weak: we don’t see these emotions around us in the friends we love and respect. We feel like there’s something wrong with us and that we’re all alone.

I’ve been pondering, of late, creating a social site that requires you to fill in four statuses each week, before you can do any other updates: “this week something made me: happy/ hopeful/ sad/ angry.” No, it’s not the full spectrum of emotion, but it feels like a start to break down the barriers of current social networks, where only “here’s me being happy” is reflected.

I think if the site were either anonymous numbers (ie Anonymous0001) or restricted to 5 close friends it could be really useful to act as a support network for people who are experiencing similar issues and share experiences and insights. Ideally, the site could
be sorted by emotion or keyword to see everyone’s emotion from each category; in order to enable this supportive connection.

What do you think? Is this enough to begin breaking down these barriers in perception?

Or should we begin a campaign for Honest August: where to support positive mental health, we encourage  people to share emotions on Facebook outside of ‘happy’ and ‘angry’?

What do you think?