C-List Blogging

According to Dave Pollard’s breakdown, I’m a ‘C-List Blogger’.

> Extrapolating some work I did last year, only about 20,000 blogs (a mere 0.4% of all active blogs) have a sizeable audience (more than 10 regular visitors and more than 150 hits per average day), and readership in a typical day is only a little more than three million people, each spending an average of about 20 minutes flitting among 15 blog pages. > > Using Shirky’s Power Law, and adding in RSS subscriptions to the hit count totals, that would break today’s blogosphere audience down roughly as follows: > >


Total
Hits/Day
Average
Hits/Day
per Blog
Minimum
Hits/Day
per Blog
Average
Aggregate
Reader
Attention/Day
per Blog
100 A-list bloggers
15 million
150,000
15,000
1700 hrs
2,000 B-list bloggers
5 million
2,500
1,000
62 hrs
18,000 C-list bloggers
9 million
500
150
13 hrs
80,000 up-and-coming bloggers
8 million
100
50
2.5 hrs
5 million remaining active bloggers
15 million
3
0
-

According to StatCounter, right now I get an average of 968 unique visitors per day — but according to FeedBurner, I have another 319 people watching my site through one of my available RSS feeds (8 subscribed to my comments-only feed, 30 to my excerpts-only feed, 225 to my full-post feed, and 59 to my full-posts-plus-comments feed), which puts me at 1,287 readers per day, placing me on the low end of the ‘B-List’ category.

Of course, the one major caveat to this is that many of those 968 daily visitors are just hits from Google searches, and in order to keep my ego in check, StatCounter is only registering an average of 70 returning visitors per day. Refiguring my numbers that way, that gives me 389 regular daily readers, just under the average in the ‘C-List’ category.

However you want to break it down, though, I think it’s pretty damn cool that I’ve got in the neighborhood of 400 people keeping an eye on my ramblings from time to time.

Now, who are all of you people? ;)

(via Jacqueline)

iTunesMedina” by Outback from the album Dance the Devil Away (1991, 6:26).

2 Trackbacks

  1. By Scam City version 8.0 on February 28, 2005 at 9:36 am

    C-List Blogging

    This comes via Michael Hancom, and it’s an interesting view on the various levels of the “blogosphere.” …

  2. By The Republic of T. on March 7, 2005 at 5:48 pm

    Stats & Status

    Or “Why I Will Probably Always Be a ‘C-List’ Blogger.”

    I noted with interest Michael’s post about blog statistics and blogger status; partially because I deal with blog statistics regularly at work, and partically because I’ve been every-so-slightl…

5 Comments

  1. I found you by googling “Ashcroft.” I think it’s funny.

    I think you’re sexy! And if you ever come to NYC, come and ride Critical Mass in Manhattan with us!

    Posted February 26, 2005 at 3:22 pm | Permalink | Reply
  2. I’m no one… But thanks for the recent spate of nods, pushed me up to a c-list blogger too

    Posted February 26, 2005 at 4:25 pm | Permalink | Reply
  3. I was a beta tester with TypePad (aka ARTatComo) I switched to BlogWare at BlogHarbor and just bought artifactor.org URL.

    Posted February 26, 2005 at 8:09 pm | Permalink | Reply
  4. “Now, who are all of you people?”

    Leave me out of this!

    Posted February 27, 2005 at 7:47 am | Permalink | Reply
  5. I’m thinking Google bots are probably responsible for pushing me into the “80,000 Up and Coming Blogger.” Of course that just sounds silly, how about I just call myself a D-List blogger.

    Posted March 2, 2005 at 3:27 pm | Permalink | Reply

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