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Web 2.0 Research Brett Atwood

Journ 417 Various Pew Studies

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Page 1: Journ 417   Various Pew Studies

Web 2.0 Research

Brett Atwood

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Three New Web Usage Studies

Web 2.0 Social Networking Blogging

LinkedIn Exercise

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Web 2.0 Statistics

Pew Internet has a new study that contrasts early Web site usage with “Web 2.0” usage

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Photobucket vs. Kodakgallery

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Wikipedia vs. Encarta

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Wikipedia Traffic by Age

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Encarta Traffic by Age

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MySpace vs. Geocities

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Social Networking & Teens

Pew Internet just released a study on social networking usage among teens

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Key Findings

55% of online teens use social networks 55% have online profiles Older girls predominate

70% of older girls have used social networks Compared to 54% of older boys

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Key Findings

66% of teens who have a profile limit access to “friends”

48% of teens visit social networks “daily or more often”

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Reasons for Usage

Managing Current Friendships91% use the sites to “stay in touch” with

friends they see frequently in person82% use the sites to “stay in touch” with

friends that they do not regularly see

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Most Popular Sites

85% use MySpace 7% use Facebook 1% use Xanga Others:

Yahoo Piczo Gaiaonline Tagged.com

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Usage Patterns

84% post messages to a friend’s profile 82% use internal messaging/email system

of the social network site 61% use the “bulletin” feature to send

message out to all “friends”

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New Blogging Report

A major survey on “blogging” was released July 2006

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Largest U.S. based “blog” sites

MySpace.com Owned by NewsCorp

Blogger.com Owned by Google

Other big sites: LiveJournal.com Xanga.com Typepad.com Tripod.com

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Who is Blogging?

Bloggers are youngMore than half (54%) of bloggers are under the

age of 30. 55% of bloggers blog under a pseudonym,

and 46% blog under their own name.

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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Who is Blogging?

54% of bloggers are first-time writers They have not published anywhere else

44% have previously published

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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Is it Journalism? Most bloggers do not think of what they do

as journalism. 34% of bloggers consider their blog a form

of journalism, and 65% of bloggers do not.

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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Is It Journalism?

Most have not “trained” to be journalists57% of bloggers include links to original

sources either “sometimes” or “often.” 56% of bloggers spend extra time trying to

verify facts they want to include in a post either “sometimes” or “often.”

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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Blogging Topics

Blogs are viewed as “personal journals” by many37% of bloggers cite “my life and

experiences” as the primary topic of their blog

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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Blogging Topics

There is a misconception about blogs in mainstream mediaOnly 11% of bloggers say they focus mainly

on government or politics.

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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Other Hot Topics

7% Entertainment 6% Sports 5% General news and current events 5% Business 4% Technology 2% Religion, spirituality or faith

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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Why Blog?

84% of bloggers describe their blog as a “hobby”59% of bloggers spend just one or two hours

per week tending their blog. One in ten bloggers spend ten or more hours

per week on their blog.

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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Why Blog?

The majority of bloggers cite an interest in sharing stories and expressing creativity.

Just half say they are trying to influence the way other people think.

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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The Political Factor

Bloggers are more political than non-bloggers

72% of bloggers look online for news or information about politicsOnly 58% of all Internet users seek news and

info on politics in the U.S.

SOURCE: PEW INSTITUTE 2006 SURVEY

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In-Class Demonstration

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Homework

Create a LinkedIn professional profile