33% Of Online Pop. Pegged As "Conversationalists"

In: web resources

20 Jan 2010

Although you probably guessed as much, people who occasionally update their Facebook status or post something on Twitter represent a significant portion of the online community.  And today, Forrester pegged the exact portion at 33 percent.

Forrester’s been classifying online people as inactives, spectators, joiners, collectors, critics, and creators for quite some time, and its statistics regarding these groups have provided valuable about how the online landscape is changing.

The problem, as Forrester analyst Josh Bernoff noted earlier, is that these categories didn’t leave much room for normal Facebook and Twitter users.

So the conversationalists classification was introduced to represent Twitter users and Facebook users who make at least one status update per week.  Exactly 33 percent of online folks should fall into this grouping, and Bernoff added, "They’re 56% female, more than any other group in the ladder."

Also, "While they’re among the youngest of the groups, 70% are still 30 and up."

The above diagram pretty well shows the breakdown of other groups.  Now we just get to sit back and see how quickly people travel up the ladder as the social Web gains momentum.

Related Articles:

> Twitter Earns Itself A Candy Heart Phrase

> Employers Using Social Networks To Screen Employees

> Content Can Now Go Viral More Easily With Facebook

 


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1 Response to 33% Of Online Pop. Pegged As "Conversationalists"

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bertram gunk

March 11th, 2010 at 9:19 pm

flock is simply a modified form of firefox. it uses the same source code, the pages render exactly the same, and most firefox extensions work on flock. the main difference between the two browsers is that flock specializes in providing social networking and web 2.0 facilities. it takes more memory to run and is sometimes a bit slower than firefox but overall, it's a good browser.

unless you are interested in flock's extras, you should stick with firefox. using flock for "normal" browsing is pointless since firefox will perform better and is less intense on your system's ram.

http://www.flock.com/mozilla

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