Tuesday, 9 June 2009

Twittering on regardless

The BBC Online News headline runs 'Twitter hype punctured by Study', but I'm not convinced that there has been any more hype for Twitter than there was for any other social web service. In fact I think that both Facebook and YouTube have grabbed more column inches that Twitter over the last year or two. The only hype I can recall is the fact that several high profile celebrities such as Oprah Winfrey and Ashton Kutcher have recently jumped on the bandwagon for some shameless self promotion. You can tell them a mile off - they have a million 'followers' and they follow exactly ... no-one.

So along comes a study from Harvard University which suggests that just 10% of users generate 90% of the content on Twitter. So what? With 10 million users (and growing), that would still be 1 million regular twitterers. And the trend is upwards. One of the crass claims of the Harvard study is that "most people only ever "tweet" once during their lifetime." Well 'most' is unquantifiable, and are these people all dead, now they have completed the questionnaire? That would be the only way to make sure they only tweeted once in their lifetimes, wouldn't it?

The part that really gets my goat though, is the flippant statement that "This implies that Twitter resembles more of a one-way, one-to-many publishing service more than a two-way, peer-to-peer communication network." Well, that may be true of the celebrity bandwaggoners (a very small minority), but it certainly is far from the truth in my experience. Twitter is probably the richest social networking tool in terms of information sharing, conversation making, contact maintenance, social presence and immediacy. And there are many other affordances in the microblogging tool.

No, I'm not convinced that this study (which is a survey of 300,000 users) is actually saying anything useful or positive. Some people don't get Twitter and others only get it partially and use it in a limited manner. Potentially, Twitter is one of the most powerful social networking tools ever to have emerged from the so-called Web 2.0 - and I think it will stand the test of time. There is a large and growing body of tools that support Twitter, and already a vast amount of evidence to show that Twitter can be used inventively as a teaching and learning tool. It seems to me that from their tone, the Harvard researchers can be numbered amongst those people who simply 'don't get' Twitter.

Image source

6 comments:

Aaron said...

Steve,

I'm with you.

I'm also one of many who exclaim how there's a body of evidence that shows, as you state "...that Twitter can be used inventively as a teaching and learning tool."

Where are these case studies and examples? I think there are many like you and I who are on the front lines of swaying organizations to bring Twitter (or other microblogging services) inside the firewall, but it helps to have the stories at hand.

wollepb said...

Steeve, I'm with you. There are numerous stories that help showing the strengths of Twitter (for educational purposes, at conferences or in other settings).

I found especially interesting about your post the links to Oprah and Ashton ;)

So long
Wolle

Sherry L. de Alvarez said...

Those who can't (or choose not to) see the potential of Twitter are sadly narrow-sited. Even beyond all of the applications you mention here, we have seen it (and other social media) used to help move societies forward/toward positive social change:

http://www.boingboing.net/2009/05/17/guatemala-largest-pr.html

Keep fighting the good fight! :)

John Sutton said...

I've given up responding to folk who just run down Twitter based on the celebrity hype/hack lazy journalism that it has generated. They don't want to "get it". For me it has transformed my professional life to such an extent that I can't imagine a working life without Twitter.

Sigi said...

Well spoken, Steve! There seems to be a hype of twitter experts doing strange surveys and writing in prestigious newspapers about the nonsense of twitter. And if you take a closer look you realize that they aren't even using twitter and have never experienced the benefits of social networking so well described in yoir post.... let them talk... let them write... I don't give a damn for it! We will not win new social networkers with the help of these reports but we are constantly enlarging our network by just using the social software in the way we do!

James Clay said...

Everybody knows that Twitter is just about the coffee....

http://elearningstuff.wordpress.com/2008/12/05/its-all-about-the-coffee/

 
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