DISQUS

Dan Zarrella: Twitter’s Suggested Users are Less ReTweetable

  • Glen Allsopp · 7 months ago
    You have way too much time on your hands, Dan.

    Haha just kidding, excellent info and great analysis. Thanks for putting it together!

    Cheers,
    Glen
  • Batman · 7 months ago
    Great stuff, as always!!! Of course, this is still not necessarily a calculation of Authority.
  • FundingPost · 7 months ago
    Anyone notice that they have the half the cast of Star Trek TNG on there? Punky Brewster, Weird Al, Jessica and Ashley Simpson, and the Dell Outlet for questions on your broken refurbished dell. I understand your statistic :)
    Joe
  • keeperofdreams · 7 months ago
    i am a newbie and i find these stats very interesting, thanks for your time and effort, someone has to question how twitter really works. lol
  • Justyn · 7 months ago
    Very insightful (though I think we all could have guessed). Another interesting metric would be celebs vs. non celebs in the suggested users list.

    Sure, people retweet celebrities - partly in hopes to catch celebs attention, or just associate their name with the celeb. But not necessarily because what they say is interesting.

    The non-celeb suggested users are RT'd because what they say is actually interesting. As such, they should almost be included in the other category.

    Basically, that's a long way of saying that celebs are retweeted because they are celebs, not because the tweets have any value.
  • ZenShadow · 7 months ago
    I'm reminded of a similar 'white paper' (tongue firmly in cheek) blogpost I wrote awhile back (lost to history I'm afraid!) ... in it I developed the "Paris Ratio" which is based on:
    1. Your name or meme-name google count
    2. Paris Hilton's google count
    3. "John Smith" google count (common name filter)

    computation was fairly straight forward (but long forgotten) which let you know your 'fame value' vs. Paris Hilton's fame value.

    Additional 'white paper' produced regarding the value of Micheal Jackson's handshake (back when he was selling his handshake or something MJish like that).

    Good to know the silly metrics live on in Twitterville!
  • Kathie · 7 months ago
    I'm new to Twitter, so if I'm totally failing social media etiquette with this approach, please let me know! But I have to wonder - why RT them at all? My viewpoint is that my network (tiny though it may be) would already be aware of top and suggested users, and would have followed them if they wanted. I don't need the same story from 20 different sources. @RotaryKat
  • Mat · 7 months ago
    I wonder why the suggested users dont twitter as much but are still " suggested".

    I dont use twitter (but intend to start) so maybe i will look into it more.
  • Tom · 6 months ago
    My impression of the "suggested" is a list of "trophy accounts". It starts in sales that you highlight your presitge factor and attract those that want to associate with that level of clientele.

    That's all. It keeps it interesting for those that are wanting a quick follow list.
  • murmur55 · 6 months ago
    let's see twitterers organized based on their category...science, celebrity, activism, social-media maven, marketing etc...that would tease out data that has more significance...
  • Carl Ingalls · 5 months ago
    Dan,
    Thank you for yet another excellent article. You were one of the people I had in mind when I tweeted, "Anything worth doing is worth measuring."
    Carl Ingalls