The Social Web Influences Content

Vader and Robert Scoble Hanging at Industrial Light and Magic

The Gravity of Social Topics

Like many “new bloggers”* I receive a majority of visitors from social web locations. Social sharing sites like Twitter, HackerNews, and comments^ are my dominant referral sites, comprising a large fraction of this blogs monthly traffic. What this means is that 80-90% of readers here are familiar with social media and feel comfortable sharing these posts with their friends and commenting (engagement/resonance). This causes social web topics to dominate in page views and virality (retweets, likes) not just for Victus Spiritus, but for many new bloggers. Social web users (the social web is read/write) are self selecting content that falls into known categories and grooves that are familiar.

The most common talked about topic on Twitter is Twitter. It’s like the Pikachu characters that screech their own name to self identify (and nothing else). The other dominant topics are celebrities, major events, and daily habits. At some point social media networks grow up, as user bases stabilize and either enable connectivity on varied interests or die out. The Ouroborus can grow only so large by eating it’s own tail.

But within networks that survive maturation is where the magic happens. This rich topical engagement is already brewing within Twitter and Facebook to varying degrees, you just need to spend some time looking for the right communities. The social web is an incredible source of serendipitous search. Just from my daily visits to AVC (Fred Wilson’s blog) I generally pick up a few links to well matched sources of information or new tools. Whether it’s a new startup or an excellent media juggling tool, I’m rarely dissappointed. Each tool has a founder’s story behind it, making it much more compelling. The struggle to independently create valuable tools resonates with my own creative urges.

Content Influences the Social Web

Addictive hit songs and movies or video series can instantly spread throughout the web to niche communities. The long tails of human interest gravitate towards the highest quality or most interesting media, which flows back to larger but broader attention groups.

A great blog post or interview can spin off many thousands of side discussions to dissect every nuance of a topic. It is through our collective and critical examination that we discover truth.

Games are something to talk about, and share experiences within so they are an incredibly popular and successful extension of social media. Folks can bond over the latest hit social game and discuss strategies or multiplayer experiences. Game behavior can also improve the quality and culture of virtual social locations. The future of web sites and mobile platforms are those that we bring with us. This blog travels 10-12 miles with me each morning as I write it while walking.

Giant Chickens Have Nothing to do with this Topic but are Infectiously Fun, thanks Eli

A Chocobo Song:

Notes:
* I’ve blogged a little over a year and ~390 posts.

^ one of my “guerilla marketing” tactics to find my blog’s community is to comment on related blog posts I’m interested in a few thousand times a year. I have a dozen or two favorite blogs I frequent but make sure to visit and say hello to a few new bloggers a week

  • http://steamcatapult.com/ Dave Pinsen

    Where do you find the blogs you comment on? And the new bloggers? I need to do more commenting on others' blogs. There's a big Internet out there and I end up going to the same half dozen sites over and over.

    That chicken video is crazy. I have to have some coffee before I finish watching it.

  • http://www.victusspiritus.com/ Mark Essel

    I found most of the blogs I frequent through iterative social
    searching. Check out http://disqus.com/VictusFate/
    for some of them. Unfortunately many of the comments I leave are
    on non-disqus blogs so there's no easy collection of them.

    By the way Dave, as much as I love commenting, I'm not rich or famous
    because of it. I just really appreciate it when people pipe up on my
    blog like yourself :)

    Speaking of which, anything new I should check out on your blog?
    (sometimes I miss your tweets and rarely check my rss reader).

    Nevermind just caught it and retweeted , will send fuel your way asap!

  • http://steamcatapult.com/ Dave Pinsen

    There's a psychic reward in seeing comments. I like seeing them too.

    Thanks for that retweet, btw. Been posting more frequently the last couple of days, since I decided to just post on one blog instead of two.

  • http://www.victusspiritus.com/ Mark Essel

    I'll make sure to subscribe by mail then (it's easy through feedburner
    if you use them) so I don't miss your posts. You are afterall my most
    consistent commenter!

  • http://twitter.com/jimocz Jim Dwulit

    I like this look for your blog.
    Why are you praising twitter , yet have left it hanging in a previous post?

  • http://www.victusspiritus.com/ Mark Essel

    Hmm, wasn't praising them exactly. I did get traffic from Twitter, but
    mostly on topics that talk about Twitter. It's the Pikachu concept,
    the most common words on Twitter are Twitter, tweet, social media and
    most readers from Twitter are familiar with social media sharing.

    I think I have a way for my Identi.ca, Buzz, or Redrob.in posts to get
    pushed to Twitter. I'm satisfied as long as the media can exist
    outside the central server. Still weird how we only have limited
    access to our own and friends data through Twitter.

    One way of fully opening up, Pubsubhubbub looks like it is being
    rejected by Twitter API folks. Probably due to short sighted ideas
    about information control. They'd have a much larger audence instantly
    if they embraced current web real time distribution channels.

    Appreciate the comment though, it's good to get an outside perspective
    on my varying hypocrisy levels :)

  • http://arnoldwaldstein.com awaldstein

     I’ve started to play around with William Mougayar curation portal Eqentia. While still early its a powerful discovery tool with some possibilities.

    For example…http://portal.eqentia.com/contentmarketing