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Matt @ The Church of No People
November 30th, 2009 @12:02 am  

I almost RTed rather than commented! But really, I think you’re right, in a general sense. I can’t believe I was on the fence about Twitter a few months ago. Traffic from Twitter hasn’t been huge, but it’s added a good chunk of visitors. A few people RT, and those are usually people who don’t comment. Don’t know if they would comment otherwise, but I’ll take it anyway.

All in all, it’s a tradeoff, but a positive one.

Jon O
November 30th, 2009 @1:28 am  

What plug-ins are you using to track this info? I’m building my blog now and am going nuts with all the plug-in options. I doubt they’re all the same, so I’m asking the pros what they like.

Phillip Gibb
November 30th, 2009 @2:41 am  

Hi,

I wonder how many people just reweet the link in the hope to gain exposure for themselves.
or how many people merely click the link the check that it’s ok and then pass it on.
Personally I would have 5 comments over a 1000 hits, esp if they are engaging and thoughtful. Twitter sometimes feels like a big echo chamber. For sure, I have found more readers through it but don’t you think it just generates more bounce than loyalty?

Phill

Paul Steinbrueck
November 30th, 2009 @9:08 am  

Hey Scott, insightful post. For the most part I agree with all points, except I wonder about there being fewer comments.

I agree that some people will tweet their thoughts rather than post them in a comment. However, I’ve seen an increase in comments on both of the blogs I manage. I believe its because the rate of more exposure/unique visitors is greater than the % of people who tweet instead of comment. That’s just my personal observation, though. It probably varies with the blogger/twitterer.

Travis
November 30th, 2009 @9:34 am  

Yeah, I’ve noticed that most of my readers come from either Facebook or Twitter, yet only 5 people subscribe to my RSS feed.

Brockley Nick
November 30th, 2009 @9:59 am  

Interesting post. I’m a hyperlocal blogger and I’ve definitely noticed that some of the site’s most loyal readers (who I regularly communicate with via Twitter) are now choosing twitter to discuss articles amongst themselves, rather than engaging in wider debate on the site. I think that’s a bit of a loss in terms of the quality of debate.

On the other hand, Twitter also consistently drives about 7% of total traffic to my site and plenty of the stories I tweet about get retweeted, so I believe it’s definitely helping the site reach a broader audience.

Gloria
November 30th, 2009 @10:31 am  

Twitter has definitely had an effect on a whole lot more than blogging. Because of my (personal) schedule and timing, I actually do subscribe to the RSS of blogs that interest me and I try my best to leave a comment….Not to pat anyone’s ego, but for them to know that their being used, people are appreciating their content and being helped by it. As for me and my blodge (a.k.a. blog), I’m still working on trying to get interesting enough…LOL. I just can’t “hang” w/the big “dogs”……

Thank YOU for always bloging, being consistent and bringing good content.

Marc Millan
November 30th, 2009 @7:29 pm  

No doubt twitter brings to my attention many blogs, even if I have never read them before but to keep em coming back you have to have great content over all. It’s also how you sell it, some people flat out do a dry sell on twitter and that turns me off, say something interesting, use your personality, you bog don’t you? Intrigue me..then I’m in.

SamRag
November 30th, 2009 @8:56 pm  

Good article, though I must agree with Paul Steinbrueck regarding that most likely there will be more comments due to higher exposure.
What we need is more of what Mashable does, where they include the tweeting below their comments. I would like it in a more concise manner though – as scrolling through most of the short tweets is pointless.

Scott Williams
November 30th, 2009 @9:52 pm  

Matt- Thanks for sharing and being from a church of no people. :-)
Jon O- Sitemeter is great, I’ll shoot you an email with my fav. plg-ins.
Paul- You are probably right about it depends upon the blogger, over the years much of my interaction happens on twitter.
Phillip- I prefer subscribers over commenters, but I really like em’ all LOL
Travis- thx
Brockley- thx for your perspective
Gloria- Well said and thx for the kind words… keep writing, everyone is a big dog in blogging because of twitter right!
Marc- Well said… you just need to start blogging!
SamRag- Mashable is the most used word in the English Language in 2009… Mashable got serious game!

Stephanie
December 9th, 2009 @12:37 pm  

Just retweeted.

But…I decided to comment as well. ;)

In this fast-paced and immediate world of social media, it is inevitable that time will be divided. People can’t be active on Twitter, Facebook, Digg, AND other blogs PLUS produce their own content so they tend to “pick-and-choose” their favorite mode for transmitting and receiving information. Hence, the “fewer comments” phenomenon. I have definitely noticed that on my blog, by the way…which, I admit, makes me a bit sad.

Jonathan Streeter
December 9th, 2009 @11:33 pm  

“I wonder how many people just reweet the link in the hope to gain exposure for themselves.” -Phill

I would guess 80-85%.

It really makes for a lot of useless NOISE.

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