In the realm of web statistics, there are three numbers that are great to use if you want to tell lies. They are:
– RSS subscriber numbers
– Facebook app install numbers
– Follower numbers on Twitter, Friendfeed, Tumblr, or some other social media service
I tell you this because there is a discussion brewing on Techmeme this morning
about how to get a lot of followers on FriendFeed. And I am telling you
that the number of followers you have may be relevant early on in the
life of a service, but it really doesn’t matter in the long run.
Let’s start with RSS subscribers. This blog has, according to
FeedBurner, 133,000 RSS subscribers. That’s a big number. But the
number of people who read this blog via the feed every day averages
less than 4,000. Why is that? Well for one, that subscriber number has
grown every day and never goes down. It includes people who stopped
reading a long time ago, people who subscribed in multiple readers but
now only use one reader, people who read once a month or once a year,
etc, etc. Bottom line is the 133,000 number is basically useless.
Now lets look at Facebook app installs. Let’s look at the Social Gaming Network (SGN).
Their Facebook apps have been installed almost 46 million times. And
yet all the games together average about 650,000 daily users. Why is
that? Well for mostly the same reasons. Some people install Free Gifts
once, but rarely use it after that. I don’t mean to pick on SGN. It’s
true for every Facebook app company. Our portfolio company Zynga has had 51 million of their apps installed and averages 1.7mm daily users. That’s the way it is in the Facebook app economy.
I don’t know of any way to calculate the number of people who actually
visit my updates on Twitter or FriendFeed, but I do know that my
tumblog gets on average 250 visits per day. I suspect the radio of
daily users/viewers to followers on Twitter and FriendFeed are much
lower than Tumblr, maybe approaching the 3% number of feed readers to
feed subscribers number.
Social media is no different from all media. The number of people
who at one point were interested in your content or service is not that
meaningful. What matters is the number of people who engage with your
content or service on a daily basis and how engaged they are. And RSS
subscribers, Facebook app installs, and follower numbers don’t measure
that.
For more of Fred’s insights, go to his blog.