Yep! At least in one metric, you stand a good chance of getting more retweets than Justin Bieber.
Before we discuss Canada's sweet prince and his Twitter followers, let's take a look more generally at how people engage on Twitter. This will help lay the groundwork to understand the true value of retweets.
Twitter is a lot less social than you might think! When I first started using the platform, I assumed that it was all these little conversations zipping back and forth. And, sure, that does happen. But it turns out that Twitter, still, is primarily a broadcast medium where people spend the majority of their time sending out their thoughts in a non-conversational manner. Well, that's at least judging by the relatively scarcity of @contact tweets (tweets that begin with an @mention).
In fact, there's actually a slight negative correlation between @contacts and follower count. This simply means that the more followers you have, the fewer @contacts you will make. Perhaps this makes sense; Twitter superstars have less use for us "little people." (Although Justin Bieber, for one, has a significantly higher engagement rate with his fans.)
There's also a scarcity of retweets, too. In an average user's timeline, you'll find that just 10% of their tweets are retweets:
So, retweets are really quite valuable. It's a true marker of a tweet's value.
However, some tweets get retweeted more than others. In fact, the most basic division of retweet counts is between @contact and non-@contact tweets. (Remember, an @contact tweet is one that begins by @mentioning someone; it is either the start of a new conversation, or a reply to that person.) Simply put, non-@contact tweets often get 10x's more retweets than @contact tweets. Perhaps this is one of the reasons why people actually engage at a relatively low rate, as there are fewer retweet rewards!
This is an important consideration in any comparison. We need to compare apples to apples, and so in my analyses, I always look at the average of a user's non-@mention tweets.
And what do we find? Well, the average retweet rate correlates pretty tightly with follower count. Namely, the more followers you have, the more average retweets each of your tweets will get.
That's Bieber in the upper-right hand corner, by the way.
Since it's pretty unlikely that you will have 20+ million followers, a useful way to compare your tweets' performance (in terms of retweets) is to look at how many retweets they generate per 10K followers. It turns out that you should expect each of your tweets to get roughly 1.3 retweets per 10,000 followers that you have.
So, if you have 50,000 followers, the median user at that level will generate about 5+ retweets per tweet. Only have 1,000 followers? Then you can expect, at that rate, to get one RT per 10 tweets that you make.
This, my friends, is how you can outperform Bieber!
This chart shows you the retweet rate per 10K followers for a sample of users. Note that these rates are pretty consistent across all follower counts. (There is a slight upward tendency for lower follower count users, simply due to the fact that one or two random retweets that they may get is equivalent to several 1000 retweets for high follower count users.)
Check it out: Bieber gets about 10 retweets per tweet per 10K followers that he gets. That's pretty high. @rihanna, on the other hand, gets around one retweet per 10K of her followers. That's lower than average.
With Followerwonk, we'll be coming out with tools down the line to help you perform comparisons like this. But in the meantime, take your follower count and divide by 10,000. Then multiply that number by 1.3. That is the average number of retweets that your non-@contact tweets should get. Are you outperforming Bieber?
So with my 28 twitter followers i should get a retweet every 275 posts i make. Best get cracking
Yes - with my 3 twitter followers I should get a retweet every 2,564 tweets. So if I tweet at least once a day for the next 7 years, I should get a minimum of 1 retweet. :-p
Hehehe... check this guy out: https://twitter.com/reinkarnazija He has a single tweet with 175,000 RTs!
Does Justin Bieber actually do his own tweets? Also, out of all his followers, how many are bots? How many are following because of his actual tweets? And how many didn't know who he was when they followed him?
I think in Justin's case fame had a lot to do with it. Also, Justin is young and catering to the younger generation, which IMO is the largest audience to target.
I'd like to see this case study done with two companies that are not branded or two new users and a comparison of @contact @mention. .
I agree that fame is a big factor working in Bieber's favor, or any celebrity for that matter. I would like to know if people just automatically RT updates from their favorite celebrities without much regard for what is being said.
Ya Nick! Fame is just his big factor. Most of the people who RT celebrities' tweet definitely doing it without any regard of what is being said. Either it makes sense or not, they will RT.
It's just sad that people intend to "share" either bad things coming from those celebrities. Ya, of course, not all of the tweets are good.
I've heard rumors of some of these people using things like TwitterBacklinks.com but I don't think Justin Bieber is someone that would need to do that. Those things are probably reserved for political agendas imo. That being said, the @contact and @mention comparison would be pretty interesting to see with non branded companies.
With most of the big celebrities and even DJ's their management would do their Tweets, even Lil Wayne has a "Digital Marketing Manager", sure they may jump on every now and then and post out something, but I am guessing a high percentage of their Tweets are in fact management.
In regards to how many accounts are bots and fake profiles you can use software like:
https://fakers.statuspeople.com/
Hello James,
Great point, I am also believing that when big celebrities come to on Social Media platform and share or twitting anythings it will be pure manage by some bots or by some fake profiles.
Thanks for sharing software to finding out fake profiles.
I'm pretty sure he does do his own tweeting. Either that or he needs to fire his management. Case in point...
https://twitter.com/justinbieber/status/272249458518028289
@justinbieber: "cereal is really good."
= 66,418 retweets, 33,919 favourites
*facepalm*
All I got from this was how to calculate how many retweets I should be getting and that non-@contacts perform better (something I already assumed). Nothing on building a following that is more likely to retweet your content, what types of content get retweeted more, how to get retweeted by a major thought leader etc. This is the stuff I'd be interested to learn.
I don't think @contact or @mention will make a difference. There are too many other indicators.
If I @mention a good friend (someone I have a relationship with or that I've helped) they are more likely to interact, then someone I did not reach out to.
However if I were famous I would not need to make the that initial connection. Getting user interaction is not about having more or less followers its more about what you do #RCS
@Smart Lock solutions,
Your comments are engaging as is the data and analysis by @petebray . I was thinking along similar lines in the fact that Bieber is not helpful in analyzing an average user or one somewhere along the spectrum from unknown to famous. However, by itself it is interesting and wasn't really intended to be representative of anyone other than Bieber and other stars.
It's interesting to think about what might happen if the boy were more engaged with the community on Twitter. I bet he would have massive numbers on the RTs. He doesn't need to, but I bet his fame would increase exponentially. It would probably overwhelm Twitter.
Thank you both for your insights,
Darin
Unfortunately, getting traction on Twitter just comes down to being remarkable. You can break it down with some crazy analytics, but very few posts will tell you anything about how to get more RTs or anything that's actually helpful. That's just how social is. Even the ones that do just come down to "be awesome!", "be funny!", "be controversial!", etc. There's no real scientific way to get more RTs (outside of a study or two here and there with regards to simple tweaks in the layout of your tweets, i.e. putting the link in between text and not at the end of a tweet).
That's why I think posts like this are actually helpful, because they help you analyze, which is really the only thing I regard as social media marketing. Analyze, try and be more remarkable, and see what works with your audience.
Sorry for the rant...
I got some fake follower matrix for justin bieber which i have found from socialbakers.com new fake follower tool. Justin has 27% fake or empty, 12% inactive, and 61% good. If we thought this much amount followers has been managing by justin bieber personally, then its complete wrong words. Its confirmed that either they hired some one for social media marketing or they outsource brand management to else online firm.
Thanks :)
I do hope one day i will also get so many re tweets to my post:P
Yes i can beat that because i had a gift called https://tweetdoom.com/, I can create 36k fake twiiter accounts with that, it can build unverified profiles and then i can make 36k retweets with that.Black Hat SEO's never give up.
I love the graphs - this is great work - we offen debate if Twitter is "real". With programs like HootSuite and TweetAdder Twitter is becoming a bunch of robots interacting. I guess we should let the robots be social too!
I agree with your point mate.
if justin bieber gets 32,000 retweets, I guess Psy gets 32,001 retweets ;)
great headline.
You make some really good points about perception vs. reality. What do people think twitter is vs. what twitter REALLY is. I'd say the large majority of people on twitter use it to follow their favorite celebrities, athletes, musicians, ect. I would be lying if I said that wasn't the reason I signed up. I think there is a huge untapped potential for companies to take advantage of these celebrities on twitter. Beiber has over 34 million followers. If 24% are active members that's over 8 million active twitter followers. Imagine if a company secretly was paying him to promote their product on twitter? He casually posts about his favorite soft drink, or food or shoes and all of the sudden 8 million people want to drink what he drinks, eat what he drinks, wear what he wears.
Good to know I'm absolutely blasting that ratio! 101%, 83%, 139%, 169% per month for the past 4 months, with less than 4,000 followers.
Fans are crazy so they do that.They don't think that the tweet is valuable or not.The are mad for celebrity they mostly retweet the simple wishes by the star.
Justin Bieber Gets 32K Retweets Per Tweet -
I don't want to live on this planet anymore :/
It's amazing to know that Twitter has a lot of fellowship and Justin Briber got as many tweets in the response of his one tweet. In fact social media has become the great way to stay connected with others worldwide and thus it also help to increase relationships between common people or brands or even businesses.
@Smart Lock Solutions - I totally agree with you. Justin Bieber is getting 32K retweets for each tweet he makes, just because of his fame and specially a class of teenagers is following her oh sorry him :)
Thanks for the information, it has been very useful since I was looking for information on the subject and at last I could find something interesting
I do not think that many people can come close to Justin Bieber's re-tweets. I am really curious to know how many of his followers are bots, that re-tweet everything. Also, for his fans that are "die-hard" fans, I am sure they will re-tweet anything and everything he says. I am also sure that for the amount of "fake" Bieber accounts, they will re-tweet everything he says, this way they can pretend to be him as well.
For the company/person who does not have 31 million followers. It's all about how many followers you do have. And if you really want people to re-tweet your posts, then you really have to create engaging content. This way people can want to re-tweet your sayings/information.
@rehtaeh13
Bieber has 38% - Fake, 38% - Inactive, and 24% - True Fans! (jk at least they earned the title of Good by BizInsider, not sure if we can really know which of those are "die-hard")
For breakdown of other celebrities: https://www.businessinsider.com/see-how-many-fakers-are-following-your-favorite-celebrity-on-twitter-2012-8?op=1
Why do people care so much about fake followers? Some people have too much time I guess.
If its part of your job then you look at these metrics to see the true value followers add to your clients, etc.
They are discussing whether they are fake or not to justify the data that is presented or value in a re-tweet. Obviously, if re-tweets are coming from bots that 32k number looks much smaller. It is an important topic because an seo may decide to spend more time working twitter instead of other areas. I still for the most part completely avoid it and put resources elsewhere. I think Twitter is still garbage and numbers like these make me think I am right.
What's the difference between a Justin Bieber fan and a bot? They probably behave quite similarly.
hoho! That's really huge. May be justin beiber is have more bots as his friends :P Anyhow there might be a lot of metrics which made that many tweets possible in very much limited time. Guess email update is the most common thing which attracts 90% of his fans.
I wonder how many hackers are trying to get into Justin Bieber's Twitter account? His followers would be destroyed if it happened. Anyway, his colossal (and bizarre) global fame brings him all those retweets. If you're a nobody like myself everything's a bit more hard fought. It's actually Barack Obama's "Four more years." message which is the most retweet tweet of all time (unless something has changed in the last few months). I like Twitter, though. It's good fun and I enjoy connecting with the few people who bother me.
Does this ratio apply to other sites or just twitter?
Great Analyze, i hope that Justin Bieber tweet my website ! lol
So does this mean that if I'm not as popular as this YouTube turned pop idol man child that efforts on behalf of my clients are null and void?
Nice analysis but it's starting to make me rethink my online marketing strategies.
Lew Newmark
Would be cool to see how many retweets what message gets... if some pics get posted that shouldn't be posted for example ;) but than again, Bieber probably doesn't post himself. Great data though!
Can you give any insights how you managed the approach & technical side to set this up, for this scale I mean.
Hi Dries:
I queried our database of Twitter users and stratified by follower count, and then randomly selected from each "bucket". This ensured that we got a representative sample of both small accounts and large accounts. We created these buckets by starting at 0 - sqrt(10) followers, and then incrementing up by *sqrt(10)... e.g., 0 to 3, 3 to 10, 10 to 31, and so on all the way up to 100 million followers. I also limited the data to users who have >400 tweets. Then, I made Twitter calls to grab the least recent 200 of their 400 most recent tweets, and walked each tweet and classified it by @mention or no-@mention, and grabbed mean, median, and SD per user. That's about it!
Hi Peter, I don't know Justin actually do his own tweets? But as you told in whole article I have only one word No. Because the reason is that, Justin have lot's factors Like:-
1-Fame.2.He is a Young and Role model for youths.3.Reputation.4.Word of mouth.5.No Of followers on his own Account etc