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Twitter, Facebook on rise, while bloggers on decline: Forrester study

Twitter, Facebook on rise, while bloggers on decline: Forrester study

Online social networks are growing, but less users are uploading content

This year, a smaller percentage of US Internet users are contributing to social media sites - uploading videos, writing blog entries, posting comments to news articles and writing online product reviews - than in 2009, according to Forrester Research.

This means that companies need to find ways to re-engage those US Internet users who have stopped participating on their social media sites.


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A little less conversation, a little more action, baby"The initial wave of consumers using social technologies in the US has halted. Companies will now need to devise strategies to extend social applications past the early adopters. This means that you need to understand how your consumers use social media," Forrester analyst Jackie Rousseau-Anderson wrote in a blog post on Tuesday about a report she co-authored with Josh Bernoff, titled "A Global Update of Social Technographics."

Social media "creators," which Forrester defines as users who have a blog, upload videos and music and write articles, shrunk from 24 percent of the US online population in 2009 to 23 percent in the second quarter of this year, according to data from the report.

"Critics," those who rate and review products, post comments on others' blogs, participate in discussion forums and collaborate on wikis, dropped from 37 percent to 33 percent.

Likewise, "collectors," Internet users who subscribe to syndicated feeds, tag Web pages and photos and in general organise content for the benefit of other users, fell from 21 percent to 19 percent, Forrester said.

Even "spectators," the folks who read, watch and listen to what the "creators", "critics" and "collectors" post online, dropped from 73 percent to 68 percent, according to Forrester.

To boost social media participation on their sites, companies should revise the online tools they offer for people to post comments, reviews, ratings and the like to make sure they are intuitive and easy to use, as well as offer participants rewards.

The good news is that social-networking sites continue to attract new people to social media, according to the report, for which almost 27,000 U.S. Internet users between the ages of 18 and 88 were polled online.

These social media rookies drove up the ranks of "joiners," who have social-networking profiles and visit social-networking sites, from 51 percent to 59 percent, according to Forrester.

A new category this year is "conversationalists," whom Forrester describes as people who post status updates on social-networking sites and microblogging services such as Twitter. Thirty-one percent of US Internet users fall into this group.

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