Blogging still more popular than Twitter

The most prestigious Swedish advertising awards Guldägget (the Golden Egg) were handed out last evening and several prizes were given to campaigns that involved social media.

“If I should mention one trend then it has to be that the winning campaigns used a lot more of social media and PR than before”, said Digge Zetterberg, responsible for Guldägget at the Advertising Association of Sweden.

Among the different social media tools, there is little doubt that Twitter has been the one that has gotten the most attention lately. Politicians, opinion leaders and now even businesses in Sweden have joined Twitter in hope of influencing key people in their target audience.

But micro blogging is still lagging conventional blogging, at least according to the results from my fourth annual Swedish blog survey BlogSweden 4/BloggSverige 4. I surveyed 1,500 blog readers in Feburary this year and more than 8 out of 10 do not use micro blogs. Twitter is the most popular of the ones mentioned in the survey and the local Swedish micro blog Bloggy has in a short period of time become more popular than Jaiku.

21 blog readers

Several also mentioned the status bar in Facebook as a micro blog tool they use. More results from the survey will be published here in the next few days.

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Has Twitter reached a tipping point in Sweden?

I don’t know to what extent the use of Twitter during the Mumbai attacks has had an impact, but suddenly we can see a surge in the number of new Twitter users from Sweden. And not just individuals. Organizations are also joining. Today the staff behind the editorial pages of Svenska Dagbladet started an account at http://twitter.com/SvDledare, claiming to be the first Swedish media outlet on Twitter. Sydsvenskan has been on Twitter a while but only publishes a feed of links to articles. No conversation at all there.

Political parties are now also joining Twitter en masse.
– The Social Democrats can be found at http://twitter.com/socialdemokrat.
– The Left Party: http://twitter.com/vansterpartiet.
– The Green Party: http://twitter.com/Miljopartiet.
– The Centre Party is at http://twitter.com/Centerpartiet and its youth division CUF at http://twitter.com/cuf.
– The Moderate Party has protected updates and no followers: http://twitter.com/Moderaterna.
– The Liberals also have an inactive account: http://twitter.com/folkpartiet.

It’s still early days, but the opposition is ahead of the ruling parties.

Initiatives like this list of Swedish Twitter users and a hashtag for Swedes on Twitter (#svpt) will help grow the network quite rapidly. And my prediction is that by the time we move into election campaigning in 2010, Twitter will be a much more important micro blogging platform than Jaiku, due to the ease of use. The ability to easily re-tweet messages also makes Twitter far more viral than Jaiku, although I find it way easier to have meaningful conversations on Jaiku, it simply doesn’t scale the way that Twitter does.

Footnote: I am @kullin on Twitter.

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Corporate blogging among listed Nordic companies

Burson-Marsteller, were I work, has surveyed the adoption of corporate blogging among listed companies in the Nordic region, with a market capitalization of more than 1 billion euro. We found that 9.1%, or 12 out of the 132 companies have at least one company sponsored blog. Four of those 12 companies with blogs have two or more blogs associated with the company.

Corporate blogging is much more common among the large corporations in Sweden than in the other Nordic countries. Ten of the 56 companies (17.9%) that are listed on the Swedish Large Cap list have one or more corporate blogs. That is an even higher percentage than the 14.8% of Fortune 500 companies with corporate blogs, identified in a separate survey done by Burson-Marsteller in February and March this year. Finland and Norway are lagging considerably with only one company each with a corporate blog (of 27 and 25 respectively) while in Denmark none of the 24 companies have a corporate blog.

corporatebloggingwhitepaper A white paper can be downloaded here (pdf) and graphs and more info found here (although the press release is in Swedish).

Other findings:
– Nine out of the twelve companies have commenting functionality enabled on at least one blog.
– Three out of the twelve companies have trackbacks enabled on at least one blog.
– Nine out of the twelve companies have RSS enabled on at least one blog.
– Two out of twelve companies have social bookmarks enabled on at least one blog.
– Industrials is the sector with most blogging companies (4), followed by Telecommunications Services (3), Information Technology (2), Consumer Discretionary (1), Financials (1) and Energy (1).

This research was conducted during August and Sept 2008 and studied proactive blogging activities within the Nordic Large Cap list which includes corporations with a market capitalization of at least 1 billion euro and that are listed in Denmark, Finland, Norway or Sweden (as of July 18, 2008).

* Tele2 and West Siberian Resources Ltd. have shut down their blogs since the research was performed.

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Flickr reaches 3 billion photos

The popular photo sharing site Flickr reached 3 billion hosted photos this afternoon (at about 6 PM CET), at least if the numbering of the photos accurately reflect the actual amount of photos on the site. The growth has been steady during the last 12 months. It took six months between 2 billion and 2.5 billion, and then another six months to reach 3 billion photos.

Photo number 3,000,000,000 can be found here.

flickr 3 billion graph

Previous posts about the growth of Flickr: 2.5 billion and 2 billion.

Data set used:

22 Oct 04: 1000000
20 Apr 05: 10000000
15 Feb 06: 100000000
22 Sep 06: 250000000
15 May 07: 500000000
19 Jul 07: 850000000
20 Aug 07: 1180000000
06 Oct 07: 1500000000
13 Nov 07: 2000000000
17 May 08: 2500000000
03 Nov 08: 3000000000

Update: Confirmed by Flickr.

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Old data in new study on Swedes and blogs

SOM-institutet, the SOM Institute at Göteborg University, has released the results of a study about blogging – “Bloggers – who are they?”. In my view, the researcher Annika Bergström has had a somewhat skeptic attitude towards the role of blogs in previous comments. In an interview in Dagens Nyheter in 2006 she said about our media consumption that “there are changes, but they are slow, there will be no revolution”. She also commented to IDG.se that the differences in blog adoption between Sweden and the USA is due to strong Swedish tradition to read newspapers.

– Swedes turn to traditional dailies online for information. And we don’t get more time just because new media appear.

A year ago she said that “not many people read blogs, and the ones that do are often the ones that blog themselves”.

This skepticism is visible also in the “new” study. I write “new”, because the data was collected during the fall of 2007. In the report, Bergström writes:

“The survey was conducted during the fall of 2007 and it is likely that the use of blogs have increased slightly since then, but if we look at what we know from the development of other areas of online behavior we should expect only small changes.”

The study says that only 2 percent of Swedes wrote a blog each week and that 15 percent read a blog weekly. Good for us then that the World Internet Institute the other day released it’s fresh report about how Swedes use the internet, so we have figures for 2008 to compare with.

WII says that 5 percent of the population blog and 26 percent read blogs, which according to me is more than just a “small change”.

When respondents in the SOM survey were asked if they had read a blog during the last 12 months, 39 percent said yes. Still the final comment in the report reads:

“The previously mentioned debate about the importance of blogs, is to a high degree about what a small portion of the population engage in. With that said, there is nothing that says that single blogs can have a larger influence in society.”

This old data seems to appeal to TU, the Swedish Newspaper Publishers’ Association. On its site TU comments on the “latest figures” on blogging like this:

“Nowadays it seems like everyone is blogging. But it is not entirely true. Two percent of Swedes blog each week. And 15 percent reads what they write. The so called blogosphere is, in other words, smaller than the impression we get from the media attention.”

Stats from WII suggests that 1.9 million Swedes read blogs so I think it is safe to say that blogs are starting to reach a significant portion of the population. In my view, this study is based on data that is too old to really have any real value, and it doesn’t do newspapers any good to take these figures as a sign that blogs and other online channels are no big threat to them.

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