Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Viewing: Home / Digital Marketing News | Digital Media & Advertising News / 2009 / May / Twitter traffic up 22-fold this year

Twitter traffic up 22-fold this year

Added:
Jun 25, 2009

UK Internet traffic to Twitter, the "micro-blogging" service and social network, has increased 22-fold over the last 12 months, according to new research from Hitwise.

During May 2009 www.twitter.com ranked as the 38th most visited website in the UK and the fifth most visited social network. Just one year ago, in May 2008, it was the 969th most visited website and 84th most visited social network.

"Twitter has been the fastest growing major website in the UK over the last 12 months, and certainly the most talked about," commented Robin Goad, Director of Research at Hitwise. "The noticeable thing about Twitter's growth is that the vast majority of it - 93% in fact - has occurred during 2009. Media coverage of the site has escalated significantly this year and high profile celebrity endorsements, by everyone from Stephen Fry to Ashton Kutcher, have come rolling in.

“If anything, the service is even more popular than our numbers imply, as we are only measuring traffic to the main Twitter website. If people accessing their Twitter accounts via mobile phones and third party applications (such as Twitterific, Twitterfeed and Tweetdeck) were included, the numbers could be even higher."

Twitter sending traffic to media websites, but not online retailers

One consequence of its phenomenal growth is that Twitter has become a key source of traffic to other websites. During May 2009, Twitter was the 30th biggest source of traffic for other sites in the UK, accounting for 1 in every 350 visits to a typical website.

Over half of this traffic (55.9%) is sent to other content-driven online media sites, such as social networks, blogs, and news and entertainment websites. However, only 9.5% of Twitter's downstream traffic is sent to transactional websites (i.e. travel, business and finance sites, plus online retailers).

By contrast, Google UK ( www.google.co.uk, the country's biggest search engine and source of traffic to other websites) sends 30.7% of its traffic to transactional sites, while for Facebook (www.facebook.com , the UK's most popular social network), the figure is 14.7%.

"Twitter has proven to be a fantastic source of traffic for content driven sites, and the media companies with a strong presence on the service are using it to great effect," commented Goad. "However, with one or two exceptions (most notably Dell, which claims to have generated $3m via Twitter), very few transactional websites have yet used Twitter to drive sales.

“During May, Google UK sent 365 times more traffic to transactional websites than Twitter. Given that Twitter has yet to settle on a business model that will take advantage of its huge, loyal user base, this is an issue that needs to be addressed by those running the company if they are to make the service a financial as well as a popular success."

Newspapers and Twitpic amongst the site benefiting from Twitter traffic

The third party website that has benefited most from Twitter's success is Twitpic (www.twitpic.com), a service which allows users to upload photos and pictures to their Twitter profiles. The site was the biggest recipient of UK traffic from Twitter during May, picking up 1 in every 13 downstream visits from the social network.  UK Internet visits to Twitpic have increased 250-fold over the last 12 months, and it is now the third most popular photo website in the UK behind Flickr ( www.flickr.com) and Photobucket (www.photobucket.com).

Smaller blogs and technology sites were amongst the first to benefit from Twitter, but mainstream media websites in the UK were quick to follow their lead. Twitter was the 27th biggest source of traffic to News and Media - Print websites in the UK during May, and all of the main newspaper websites now have multiple Twitter feeds.

Commented Goad: "The key to having a successful Twitter presence is to engage the community. Twitter is a great viral marketing channel, and for many users the aim is to have their story 'retweeted' - i.e. passed on by other users - as many times as possible. Although all of the newspapers have multiple 'official' feeds, these tend to be bland and have very low 'retweet' rates. Journalists  'tweeting' themselves and engaging with the Twitter community typically have more success in creating viral stories."

Source: www.hitwise.com

**************************************

Follow Netimperative on Twitter

 

 

Document Actions
Subscribe to Netimperative Newsletters

Email address:


Daily
Weekly
Search Marketing
Events
Publishing & Media

Send as:
Text
HTML

Alternatively, click here to unsubscribe

Digital Training Academy
Digital Training Academy
Essential skills for today's marketers: boost your team's results with customised advanced digital marketing coaching from world class trainers at the Academy.
Mail our academy managers Ask our tutors for more
Full details here...
Digital marketing audits
Digital Training Academy

Getting the best ROI from your websites, emails and online ads? Sure?

Our digital marketing audits review your current and planned campaigns to find ways of cutting budgets without cutting impacts.

Mail our academy managers Ask for more
Full details here...
 
Digital events
Latest polls
Mobile ad networks
Apple's iAds Vs Google's AdMob- which do you think will be most succesful in the long term?



Votes : 114
Comment
Right to reply: The New Twitter – a sticky, revenue-rich service that blitzes the third-party apps
Twitter is now a 'destination website' and that means it is gunning for Facebook, but cleverly avoiding a direct dogfight. It’s more an information network than a social network and so is offering much, much more. Tanya Goodin, CEO of search and social conversion agency Tamar comments…
Sep 16, 2010
Right to reply: ‘Instant Search’– Google giveth then taketh away
Google has just announced its “streaming search” service, Google Instant, is coming out of limited Beta testing and going live for all users. According to Adam Bunn, Head of Search at leading independent search and social marketing agency Greenlight, when it comes to search engine optimisation campaigns (SEO), some websites may now suffer a drop in traffic.
Sep 10, 2010
Guest comment: No rival to the SMS text exists in the market today
SMS is the obvious “lowest common denominator” mobile marketing solution... yet critics still talk about apps and website and vouchers. Darren Daws, Managing Director at Txtlocal argues why SMS is still the best mobile marketing medium, even on smartphones.
Aug 04, 2010
All subject items…