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By Simone Janson (More) • Last updated on October 06.10.2023, XNUMX • First published on 18.12.2020/XNUMX/XNUMX • So far 8497 readers, 4843 social media shares Likes & Reviews (5 / 5) • Read & write comments
Success im Internet can be measured precisely – supposedly. Social networks like Facebook and Twitter make it even easier: friends, followers and likes are simple and popular metrics. Seemingly.
In my work, I have also dealt with a phenomenon that I have been dealing with in social life for a long time networks observe and which I dislike a bit: the constant tail comparisons. Blog charts, number of clicks, charts of followers and fans – they even already exist on Google+. The Problem: You get carried away by something like that fast go crazy - that really doesn't have to be the case.
Now, in principle, this is not unusual, the desire to compare oneself with others is as old as humanity. Even in the time before social media, the media were about numbers such as the number of copies sold, the number of viewers, visits or unqiue visitors. Because then marketers calculate their so-called return of investment. Or in German: The decision-makers in the Companies want to know what comes out at the end for what they put in at the front. And numbers always sound good. How useful but who are, is seldom asked.
But private users also look at the numbers - and let themselves be put under pressure by the constant comparisons in social networks. It's like in this “My house, my car, my boat” advertisement: Who has the craziest parties, has the coolest friends, or makes the most adventurous trips? A new clinical picture has already emerged from this in the USA, the Facebook-Depression. Be treated Peoplewho have fewer friends than others on social networks and thus feel inferior feel.
This is of course a stupid self-delusion. But through social networks, the short status messages and posted pictures, we get to know what our “friends” are up to at any time and much faster. For example, we see when someone is successful in their job, makes great trips or has had a child. And we want that too or believe we have to do it too. Because people are social beings who constantly compare themselves. That can be positive if we are inspired by the example of others to follow suit. But it can also become a problem if we do so badly in the comparison that we prefer to leave one thing the same.
This is exactly what happens with the Facebook-Depression: Above all, people who have little social contact or activities in “real” life feel neglected when they see the goings-on of their fellow human beings so closely. Especially since they don't like it in personal Conversation, can check their truthfulness based on gestures or facial expressions. And unfortunately, exciting and funny status reports or photos quickly suggest that this person must be particularly interesting and exciting - even if that is not true at all. What helps?
Just think logically: For example, the number of followers on Twitter is a quality criterion. If you have a lot of followers, you have to be particularly interesting, funny or informative. From a certain size onwards, Twitter accounts become a sure-fire success that more and more people are following - according to the unreflective motto: 15 followers cannot be wrong. Celebrities like Sascha Lobo or Dieter Nuhr have achieved tens of thousands of followers thanks to this mechanism. But is mass really a quality criterion?
Let's do the reality check. Media educator and social media analyst Thomas Pfeiffer regularly publishes a special kind of Twitter ranking. It does not count the pure number of followers, but only those followers who are active on Twitter themselves. With surprising results: Apparently, on average, only a third of the people who follow the top twitterers are actually active on Twitter at all. All the rest are file corpses who might drop by Twitter from time to time to read up on something or who have signed up at some point, but now they are Lust have lost. They are all still counted in the official follower statistics.
This can significantly distort the statistics: A successful twitterer may have 10 followers, but is actually read by far fewer people than a newer account with only 000 followers. Also at Facebook are there such file parts if z. For example, people “like” a page, but then hide it in their personal news feed: In real life, the news is then read less, even if the statistics still look good.
A comparison with other media shows how absurd this is: it would be as if a newspaper published the number of people who have ever read an issue of the newspaper instead of the current circulation figures. How many friends or followers a person or company on Twitter, Facebook and Co. is not a quality criterion. Not least because these numbers are child's play manipulate and there are already numerous service providers who do good things with fake fans or followers Money to earn.
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Simone Janson is publisher, Consultant and one of the 10 most important German bloggers Blogger Relevance Index. She is also head of the Institute's job pictures Yourweb, with which she donates money for sustainable projects. According to ZEIT owns her trademarked blog Best of HR – Berufebilder.de® to the most important blogs for careers, professions and the world of work. More about her im Career. All texts by Simone Janson.
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