Twitter equal to Facebook in awareness, if not in users

In the U.S. Twitter is now as well known among the population as Facebook, with 87% of Americans aware of each social network.

What’s interesting is the difference in growth and in resulting user figures, as shown in the Edison Research/Arbitron Internet & Multimedia Study. In 2008 only 5% of the population was aware of Twitter, as opposed to 50% awareness of Facebook.

The rapid increase in awareness of the microblogging service seems tied to the fact that a high proportion of the active Twitter users are in information sharing industries – e.g. media, marketing etc, and the fact that microblogging itself is so effective as sharing information. As Leo LaPorte said, it’s the ‘nervous system’ of the internet. It’s mean that mainstream television and print media now give a constant presence to Twitter, and more Americans are aware of the service than actually have internet access (87% versus 85%). Maybe they’re all using SMS?

twitter_facebook_awareness_edison

And yet despite this awareness, relatively few people actually use Twitter. The study shows 41% of Americans now have a Facebook profile, but only 7% are on Twitter.

This may simply be down to the lag time between awareness and signing up – after all, Facebook has had 50% awareness for the last 2 years, but only 41% signups.

The insight into Twitter demographics is also interesting. Twitter users are likely to be well educated (63% with a college degree), and in a higher income household. It’s also disproportionately popular with African-Americans (25%) and 79% would rather give up their TV than their internet connection.

Does the comparison matter?

While the comparison between the two social networks is interesting from a social and business point of view – I wonder whether it actually matters in the grand scheme of things. Twitter has over 100 million users, and if they’re skewed towards those with more money, that’s probably even more attractive to advertisers and marketers who want to reach that audience, and probably don’t want to bother with more targeting than they really have to…

Twitter is very much about information sharing on a business and industry level as much as a personal level, as opposed to Facebook, which skews towards the personal. Both overlap in terms of entertainment news and gossip, but Twitter has a slight edge due to the chance to post via SMS and mobile clients, the speed of the information flow, and the ability to query all the data for trending topics and breaking news – whereas because Facebook relies on a two-way agreement for friends, news has to break into your social network before you can discover it.

And despite both companies expanding to try and ‘become the internet’ (Twitter acquires Tweetie, Facebook’s Open Social Graph), there’s definitely room for both approaches to co-exist.

Tumblr: Stats, the ability to add pages, and revenue on the way

I’m a big fan of both Tumblr and Posterous, despite not really having the time/project to make the best use of them at the moment. So the fact that Tumblr has released a new feature, some interesting statistics and signs of new revenue streams launching soon has reignited my thoughts on how I could use the service effectively.

The new feature is the ability to add static pages – which will aid companies and bloggers looking to keep content highlighted. Adding a page is simple, with three layouts to choose from.

And it will only build on some pretty impressive statistics released today – 1 billion page views in February 2010 for starters. It also has 2 million posts every day, 15,000 new posts daily, and 18 new posts and reblogs every second.

Incidentally, 1 billion page views in February equals 36 million page views per day, 25,000 page views per minute, or 400 per second. And Tumblr has put together a nice infographic to show off the info:

Tumblr statistics February 2010

And if that isn’t enough, apparently there are also plans to unveil two new revenue generating features next month, powered by the widget mysteriously pictured below:

For a personal or simple company blog, I’d definitely recommend checking out Tumblr or Posterous. They’re easier to update than a traditional hosted blog platform (whether Blogger or WordPress), and offer as many design options etc. Ultimately a full self-hosted blog platform such as WordPress (Which this site uses) offers some additional advantages, but if you don’t want the hassle or advertising, then go with the microblogging platforms.

comScore stats on mobile Twitter usage

A belated look at a recent report from comScore which shows Twitter is the fastest growing social network on mobile, with growth of 347% since 2009.

The number of users in January 2010 reached 4.7 million – compared to just over 1 million in January 2009, giving a 4.47 multiple increase. Twitter’s 347% growth compares with Facebooks 112% (But Facebook still rules with 25 million mobile users), and Myspace declining 7%.

But to be 1/5th of Facebooks size and growing 3 times as quickly shows Twitter is looking even more promising on mobile than on the fixed internet.

The growth of Twitter – now 50 million messages per day

If you want evidence of the sheer amount of content and data being created by Twitter, look no further than the evidence provided by Twitter analytics team member Kevin Weil on the official Twitter blog.

In 2007, Twitter users were tweeting 5,000 times per day.

In 2008, Twitter users were tweeting 300,000 times per day.

In 2009 Twitter users were tweeting 2.5 million per day, and it grew 1400% to 35 million per day.

And in 2010? Twitter users are tweeting 50 million times per day, which works out at 600 tweets per second.

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Kevin goes on to mention Tweet deliveries as a much higher metric, and also says that the team will make time to share more info on ways to measure and understand the information network.

50 million messages is an interesting figure considering the measurements of web-based Twitter usage are pinned at around 55 million, and several studies indicate there’s a high churn rate of new users and a high proportion of dormant accounts – it indicates those that ‘get’ Twitter tend to share a pretty high amount of information. Which isn’t unusual, considering the same curve correlates with the amount of bloggers regularly updating, for example.

It also reinforces why tweets are becoming integrated into search tools from Google, Bing and many more.