Micro-blogging Olympics Day Three
Written by
Jason Boom on August 11, 2008 – 9:58 pm
Micro-blogging has its perks. You can meet cool people and chat all day long. The downside — you rarely get much done except for talking and reading different blogs. Well at least that’s how Sunday went. I interacted on both Twitter and Plurk most of the day, adding in a failed EC forum postings. All in all it was a good day. Then on Monday, I went to the office and got overwhelmed with Twitter. The deluge of messages really came when Gmail went kerplunk.
Back on Plurk, things were a little smoother. Plurk does have the Karma feature afterall.
Recently, everyone reached Plurk Nirvana. I had it with less than 20 Karma. It appears you should only receive it with over 80. No big deal. It’s not like it adds a whole lot to the experience. It’s just a number, right?
It has been fixed though, so no more free Nirvana spirituals.
The Karma Number
It is just a number. But the number ties into your profile and your specific activity so it can be a good indicator of your popularity to someone you don’t know. It’s tough to add random people, because you don’t really want to add just anybody. What if they have a terrible attitude? You need some degree of separation from them. Choose a friend whose judgment you trust and check out their friends.
When you’re new to a service like Plurk, it’s good to judge by numbers. On Twitter you would look at the followers compared to the number of those they’re following. On Plurk, you might also look at this, but you would check out the Karma points too. Those with Karma points above sixty definitely participate. It’s good to be in a community of those who participate because it reinforces our desire to be there. Without those individuals responding to our plurks, we’re simply talking down a long empty hallway.
Mama Always Said Be Picky When You’re Choosing Friends
I joined Plurk from an invite. I then decided to visit that friend’s friends. Ultimately I searched for a few people I knew would be using the site, added them, and then sat back to plurk. Others have added me since. As I’ve grown to use the service more frequently, I’ve found I make genuine connections with people. I could have gone through and added person after person, but people might have denied me and that would have hurt my Karma. It makes sense to add those you know then branch out slowly from there.
I looked through the interesting plurkers earlier and found one of the top plurkers to be TechCrunch’s Arrington. He had over 92 Karma. If I had his cred, I could just let the gravity of my presence feed my karma. Unfortunately I have to work hard at it, like most everyone else.
What’s the Point of All This Again?
The point is to bring in traffic and analyse how well each service helps with that. I suppose there’s lots of intangibles too. Do you have a personality people are drawn towards? Can you stay active enough to make an impression? So far with micro-blogging the newbie seems to go after well known bloggers or industry professionals first, then heads to the lesser known folks like myself. I’m trying to just get out there, get noticed, and help you all out in the process.
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Tags: blog traffic, build traffic, micro-blogging, microblogging, network, olympics, plurk, pownce, Traffic, twitter
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August 12th, 2008 at 11:03 am
Nice post. I’ve been following the Olympics while in lab, mostly via news and Plurk/Twitter. A little bit of YouTube here and there, but I mostly wait to watch the torrents/streaming when I get home.
I’m not too big into the Karma effect on Plurk; I suppose it helps, since it motivates people to use the service more, and thus drives more traffic, but I don’t think that it motivates me much. I still prefer Twitter, but it’s harder to hold much of a conversation there.
Wills last blog post..Pictoral Tour of the Opening Ceremony
August 12th, 2008 at 11:41 am
Hey Will…I’ve loved the Olympics so far. It surprises me every time the Olympics are on how much I watch — gymnastics, badminton, volleyball, etc.
The Karma effect may motivate a little, but I think more than that its an indicator to people we don’t know just how much we interact on there. Someone with a 4 karma won’t get noticed like the guy with 60. And, yes, very hard to hold conversation on Twitter. I’ve done it but its much easier on plurk.
August 13th, 2008 at 2:57 pm
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August 15th, 2008 at 5:06 pm
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