
This is a great way of looking at how people use twitter and how twitter is seen to the world. The Twitter Statistics Visualization by David at Information Is Beautiful shows the skews between men and women on twitter, the % of spammers, robots, loud mouths, content creators, quitters and more. Enjoy the great visual below! For every 100 Twitter Accounts – here are some great statistics!
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September 30th, 2009 at 3:12 am
Very interesting. I just started ‘tweeting’ last week (under my personal name). Not sure what my thoughts are yet re: the platform but I’d like to tweet useful tidbits of information including links to my local community entities, events, etc. Thanks very much for this information. All the best, Lisa
September 30th, 2009 at 6:06 am
Wow, that really puts things into perspective!
September 30th, 2009 at 6:38 am
Great report. Is there research on the purposes for which Twitter is used most often?
September 30th, 2009 at 9:29 am
Interesting, so looking positively at the stats suggests that 30% are actively using Twitter & 8%-46% are worthwhile tweets (good to/+ chatty). That is assuming that chatty = conversation, which is believe it or not ‘good’, its called communication I recall. Not bad given the anti-hype phase we are in.
If you perhaps look at humanity in offline mode (the real world) I would suggest if 30% of us were active and doing stuff that really mattered things would improve very quickly & if around 20% of conversation was meaningful well there would be no stopping us. Oh BTW an interesting look at how busy the social web is, if you haven’t seen already
http://www.personalizemedia.com/garys-social-media-count/
September 30th, 2009 at 7:48 pm
Really Cool! and informative.
it’s helps a lot for http://Social Creeper to track peak time and best time to post tweets for our clients. Thanks a lot.
Thanks
Shank
Prospect relationship Manager
SocialCreeper.com
Skype: gogetter23
September 30th, 2009 at 11:23 pm
It would be interesting to see who are the top Twitterers. Individuals? Brands?
October 1st, 2009 at 4:19 am
Great visuals. The stats are interesting but what really grabs me is the engaging graphs. I wish there were more of the like in marketing research reports…