One third of Techmeme’s headlines come from the Long Tail: The Statbot
(Note: This is a part of a series of articles on the Techmeme leaderboard. Stay tuned for more)
The Techmeme Leaderboard, though less than a year old, is already THE authority on, well, authority on the blogosphere (Technorati Top 100 is THE authority on popularity). Analysis of authority is always interesting, so I headed over to the Techmeme Leadeboard, and conjured this analysis out of thin air
Long Tail Playground? Or A-List party place?

(This graph would have looked like a flag if not for the pseudo-3D look, no?)
As you can see, the top 10 sites contribute about ~29% of the headline content, and the Top 25 contribute about 45%. More importantly, the sites that have never set foot on the Top 100 contribute 33%, or about one third of the headlines. Here’s a perhaps-easier-to-grok pie chart of the same data:

This pie chart represents the state of the Techmeme Leaderboard at this instant. 28% of all stories come from the Top 10 sites. However, 32% come from sites which are not in the Top 100.
So, a large number of small blogs contribute about one third of Techmeme’s headlines. Long tail playground.
This is the first in a series of posts dissecting the Techmeme Leaderboard. If you have any specific things you need to know, post ‘em over in the comments (Louis Gray already sent me his list ;))
The StatBot
The Statbot is dedicated to bringing out interesting and fun stats about web communities and popular folks. Content is produced primarily by 17 year old
May 5th, 2008 at 12:49 pm #Techmeme: Where the A-Listers Party With the Long Tail.
[...] carted out as Exhibit A in this argument, which is why I was glad to see the chart above from the StatBot. It shows the distribution of headlines on Techmeme by rank on the Techmeme [...]
May 5th, 2008 at 1:47 pm #ana
The assumption that blogs that rank lower than the Top 100 are already part of the long tail is just silly. Show us a graph of the traffic distribution per blog, and then we can see what is the long tail and what is the short head. The Top 100 is just a small portion of the short head.
May 5th, 2008 at 2:49 pm #olie
If I read this correctly, it looks like you have your 28 & 32% swapped around. That is, 32% come from the top 10, and 28% come from “everyone else.”
It’s still a lot — in fact, it’s still well within the “about 1/3″ range — I’m just pointing out the color-coding of the data.
May 5th, 2008 at 3:17 pm #Techmeme and the “A-list” canard » mathewingram.com/work |
[...] or how it’s dominated by the “A-listers” — so it’s nice to see a little empirical data from Yuvi, the 17-year-old data guru behind Statbot. Yuvi and his statistical abilities were [...]
May 5th, 2008 at 6:24 pm #TechCrunch Japanese アーカイブ » Techmeme:大物とロングテールが共存するところ
[...] 今ウェブでいちばん話題になっているテク系ニュースを扱う人気ブログ&ニュースサイトTechmeme、に対するbitchmeme(Techmemeへのグチ)の中でも気に入っているのが、Techmemeは大物ブログやニュースサイトなどの専任ライターを置いているサイトに席巻されている、という話題だ。ブロゴスフィアがプロ化してしまったために、独立系ブロガーが話題から取り残されてしまっているのではないかというのだ。TechCrunchはこの議論の中で実例として出されることがあるのだが、それだけにStatBotに出ていた上のグラフは嬉しい。これは、Techmemeランキングでの記事の分布をサイト順位別に表したものだ。 [...]
May 5th, 2008 at 8:36 pm #links for 2008-05-06 « David Black
[...] One third of Techmeme’s headlines come from the Long Tail: The Statbot - The StatBot “As you can see, the top 10 sites contribute about ~29% of the headline content, and the Top 25 contribute about 45%. More importantly, the sites that have never set foot on the Top 100 contribute 33%, or about one third of the headlines” (tags: internet socialmedia blogging news aggregators longtail stats visualisation techmeme) [...]
May 6th, 2008 at 10:29 am #Alex Hammer
Impressive.