Islands in the Stream

Twitter is about the real-​​time web; being in the flow. Once you’re fol­lowing more than 100 people, it becomes an entirely dif­ferent exper­i­ence to instant mes­saging or Facebook. It feels like one of those adverts for the Information Superhighway in the 1990s: people and objects and des­tin­a­tions rush by. Sometimes you’ll stop and check in, by clicking on a mystery link, or catch up on a rela­tion­ship by clicking on a username to see their last dozen updates. In the time you’ve spent doing that, though, a whole new page of updates has magic­ally appeared.

The user exper­i­ence changes rad­ic­ally depending on the client you use:

  • The twitter web page doesn’t auto­mat­ic­ally poll its source and change. Yet every time you hit Refresh, it’s dif­ferent. It’s always a reminder that the world keeps turning no-​​matter what’s hap­pening in your own little portion. As much as it lets you see into the world of the people in your network, it’s a reminder of your anonymity. At the same time, the prom­in­ence of the edit box at the top of the page is an invit­a­tion to poke the world; to let people know.
  • ‘Pro’ clients like Tweetdeck and Twhirl change the pro­pos­i­tion sub­stan­tially. You won’t miss that @ message or the mentions of your brand or interests. For this reason, they’ve become favour­ites among ego­centrics and those with mar­keting or PR interests in the network. In these client applic­a­tions, the edit box has less prom­in­ence. It’s dipping your head into a rushing river, but also checking to see if any of your fishing nets have reeled in a catch; and reset­ting the bait with another update. These clients auto­mat­ic­ally update every few seconds, you see the real time web rush past; but the nets into search terms and messages mean that the feeling of control is not so lost.
  • The mobile exper­i­ence is dif­ferent again. You’re less likely to par­ti­cipate in some respects, because data entry on a phone is trickier than from a keyboard. You’re less likely to click a link because you know that your device has a 50% chance of timing-​​out or failing to render the res­ulting page properly. The mobile exper­i­ence is thus likely to be more about obser­va­tion: checking in on your network – the ambient intimacy of it all.

Where am I going with this? A couple of places.

1. Leaving Las Twitteros

First, it turns out that, contrary to the pro­pa­ganda, Twitter is an enormous, blue FAIL WHALE when it comes to reten­tion, Mashable reported yes­terday. Most people leave after a month, it seems:

…growth from February 2008 to February 2009 was reportedly 1382%, with the incline increasing yet further in recent months.

But like many social networks, it seems many people lose steam with the service. Stat tracking firm Nielsen reports today that a full 60% of users who sign up fail to return the fol­lowing month. And in the 12 months “pre-​​Oprah”, reten­tion rates were even lower: only 30% returned the next month.

failwhale

There is more than one explan­a­tion for the massive drop-​​off in the last para­graph. The stat­istics given only track web page usage. It’s reas­on­able to suppose that a sub­stan­tial number of users graduate from using the web page to using a dif­ferent client, like Tweetdeck. In the dis­cus­sion of the article, author Pete Cashmore links to another showing that only 30% of updates come via. the page – the rest using other clients.

I don’t think that this explan­a­tion explains the Nielsen figures entirely, though. I know a lot of very artic­u­late and intel­li­gent people to whom Twitter simply does not appeal. They gave it a go and didn’t see the point. That’s OK. Saying that this is because they haven’t given it enough time and effort, as I’ve heard before, is an odd argument. It’s a bit like saying I could come to love self-​​flagellation if I put my back into it, and my nether regions.

The recent celebrity endorse­ments of Twitter which have led to such rapid growth won’t help matters. Listening to the prattle from @stephenfry & co is a less engaging exper­i­ence than being in touch with people you really know and sharing with them, I would suggest. If you use Twitter in order to keep up with certain celebrities, it must be very frus­trating when they’re getting on with their jobs rather than providing updates. I’m not saying there are right and wrong ways to use Twitter – there aren’t – but there are ways that are likely to lead to more engage­ment than others.

The rushing passage of stuff is fine in a 30-​​second com­mer­cial, but hardly everyone’s cup-​​of-​​tea when they actually come to use the Internet. Point One is that Twitter is quite important but is not and will never be the next gen­er­a­tion of the web, etc. etc.

2. Whispers in the Wind

The second matter I wanted to briefly explore was the viab­ility of Twitter as a pub­lishing or atten­tion mech­anism for media owners and insti­tu­tions. Nearly every pub­lisher does this (including NMK and its Lords and Masters at the University of Westminster). Maybe you hand-​​craft your tweets or automate them – it’s easy, using twit­ter­feed from your RSS, but err… it’s not very good, is it?

Your insti­tu­tion or organ­isa­tion will not produce that many updates a day. That’s good in some ways – people will quickly unsub­scribe from feeds that talk too much – espe­cially if they have a cor­porate or robotic feel. At the same time, because you don’t update so often, your reach is tiny compared to almost any other medium. It’s a nudge, a poke, a pebble tossed into the river, a piece of flotsam that people might nudge into from time to time. It’s worth doing only because it’s easy. But because the social media mar­keting experts are using Tweetdeck or some­thing, then they get an illu­sionary exper­i­ence of the impact of their posts – their net full of retweets and @s at the end of the day looks full even for a tiny organ­isa­tion like the one for which I work. At the same time, when I dip my head into the live stream, I see scarcely any inter­ac­tion with tweets from ‘official’ media or insti­tu­tional feeds. And there’s another problem that augments this…

If you open up a new channel of com­mu­nic­a­tion in the social media space, then there needs to be an ear on the other end listening and responding to the feedback. Social media, by defin­i­tion, is not about broad­casting, but is two-​​way. You start a blog, you need a comments person. You send an email; you need a reply-​​address that works. Carefully writing your Blog T&Cs or Twitter bio or Email news­letter sub­script can allow you to redirect responses some­where else, but by entering into a com­mu­nic­a­tions arena that is entirely two-​​way with a one-​​way meth­od­o­logy, you’re asking for problems. (Skittles and The Telegraph’s brave – you may have other words – exper­i­ments with posting unmod­er­ated twitter feeds illus­trate this hand­somely). Point Two is that Twitter is for people, not things.

Share this post:

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Possibly related:

2 comments to Islands in the Stream

  • When it comes to Twitter, the failure to retain users comes from the lack of how to use the site.

    How long do you think Twitter will be around?
    In my opinion Twitter is dead. The question should be how log do you think before we bury Twitter.com. The flock of migrating net birds is moving on to bigger and better data trees. The twitter nest will soon have only lame birds in the tree of sense­less data groves. The smart tweeters will be gone.

    To migrate is natural and it is by instinct.

    The remaining Twitters are going to kick the bucket. It will be just a matter of time.

  • Thanks for the Share itThanks for all of your support.

Leave a Reply

  

  

  

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>