Thursday, February 16, 2012

Are Your Tweets Worthwhile?


by Shelly Gustafson


A recent study from a joint team of researchers out of Carnegie Mellon University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Georgia Institute of Technology found that the average twitter user thinks ¼ of the tweets in their twitter stream aren’t worth reading.

The official study took place over 19 days and had almost 1,500 twitter users rating just fewer than 44,000 tweets of users who they were following. Participants were able to not only judge the tweets of those they follow but also submit their own tweets for judgment. 


Three rating options were available:

  • Liked/Worth reading - 36% of tweets
  • Okay/no strong opinion - 39% of tweets
  • Disliked/Not worth reading - 25% of tweets

Notably tweets that were well-liked included information sharing, questions/soliciting feedback and conversation, and tweets that had an element of self-promotion. Disliked tweets included updates on one’s current mode and activities as well as tweets that tied into conversations with others. 

Clearly the study shows that twitter users quickly moved from the original slogan of “What are you doing?” and have fully embraced the more all encompassing slogan of “What’s happening?” Whether the newly minted “Yours to Discover” slogan will continue this trend remains to be seen.
While it’s easy on a personal level to simply unfollow certain users, for business and client work it’s important to take into account what current followers find informative and interesting. Many businesses focus too much on increasing followers and forget the importance of providing thought-provoking content to the ones they already have.