A friend of mine asked: how many webloggers are there? This is like "How big is the Internet?"
I searched through Nua and a dozen other internet sites and haven't seen any research on the size of the blogosphere.
I ask you:
- Do you have an educated guess?
- Do you know of any prior work in this area?
- Can you think of a methodology or two to create useful measures of the number of bloggers and the number of weblogs?
- What related questions would you want answered?
- How might you use this information?
- Pitfalls to avoid?
- Would you join a BlogCensus.org to provide and share stats?
My wild stabs:
- Do you have an educated guess?
- Do you know of any prior work in this area?
- Can you think of a methodology or two to create useful measures of the number of bloggers and the number of weblogs?
- Some vendors host weblogs and have relevant stats. We could add those up.
- We could look at download and registrations from the top 5 vendors, and add fudge factors to cover other tools and disadoption rates
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What related questions would you want answered?
- LiveJournal.com, has a statistics page: (numbers as of 10 November 2002)
- Total users: 770910
- Users that have ever updated: 635168
- Users updating in last 30 days: 280213
- Users updating in last 7 days: 200543
- Users updating in past 24 hours: 72587
- Gender:
- Male: 201452 (36.3%)
- Female: 354085 (63.7%)
- Unspecified: 131153
- Account Type
- Free Account: 718109 (93.2%)
- Early Adopter: 14282 (1.9%)
- Paid Account: 36718 (4.8%)
- Permanent Account: 1218 (0.2%)
- Country of origin (Mostly English-speaking)
- US state of origin (California, New York, Florida, Michigan lead)
- Age distribution (mode=17)
- Client usage (90% web)
- Activity: posts by day overall (147k posts last Wednesday) Per-person would be interesting too.
- New accounts per day (eyeballing a chart it looks like 900-1400 new LJ users per day, averaging about 1100)
- I'd love to know:
- How many entries have ever been blogged? (the cumulative number of posts).
- How many links in posts? (excluding blogrolls and navigation)
- What blogging tool or service they're using?
- Blog lifecycles:
- How long to bloggers of various stripes blog?
- How many change hosts? Change tools?
- Why do people abandon blogging?
- Is there a critical mass, a minimum number of posts per day/week/month that separates those that blog from those that fail?
- Of people who take a break, how many start again?
- Number originating within a company or operating behind a firewall
- Connection speed (does broadband make it easier to blog?)
- Payload distribution. How many people include pictures, sounds, flash games, or movies? How many bytes are home pages?
- Syndication. What percentage syndicate their sites?
- Duplication/Overlap:
- How many blogs per person?
- Do you post to them equally? How many are updated daily/weekly/monthly?
- How many tools do you use?
- What ancillary tools do you use?
- Graphics and other media
- News readers
- HTML editors
- email clients
- blog-specific search (daypop, google)
- blogosphere navigation (blogdex, blogtree)
- How might you use this information?
- As a blogger.
- Always good to know where I stand in relation to the pack.
- Trends might tip me to new capabilities
- As a consultant or IT leader.
- Make better choices about deploying blogging and community tools
- Use the "bandwagon" sell when appropriate
- As a blog tool maker.
- Understand the markets I serve vs. the ones I don't
- Pitfalls to avoid?
- Hype
- Irreproducible results
- Bias - vendor, country
- Would you join an BlogCensus.org to provide and share stats?
- As a user, with anonymity.
- As a vendor, sure.
What say you?