Well – Klout Me again!

If you recall a couple of posts ago, I was discussing the Klout score.

While on the one hand I was questioning the validity of such a score, I was also bemoaning the fact that my own Klout score was just a 10.

Well, over the last week, I have been busy “extending” myself. I’ve stayed up into the late hours of the night actively involving myself with tweet conversations, interesting comments, retweets, etc.

And, I now have a Klout score of 25!

(Here – have a look…)

My Klout Score is now 25

I’m still categorized as an Explorer though.

 

 

Klout me!

Klout social media

I checked out my Klout score today.

Even though, I’ve been aware of Klout through my use of Hootsuite, I’ve never been to the actual site.

Upon arriving on the Klout site, I was prompted to enter the name of a tweeter. So I entered mine. Within seconds I got my Klout score. It was 11. And I am classified as an Explorer. As well as this there was a further explanation:

Mark Owen is an Explorer

You actively engage in the social web, constantly trying out new ways to interact and network. You’re exploring the ecosystem and making it work for you. Your level of activity and engagement shows that you “get it”, we predict you’ll be moving up.”

Ok – I knew that I was not really a big fish in the Twitter pond yet. So I wanted to learn more. I clicked on the Score Analysis tab and was presented with information about my score. Suddenly felt like I was a socially awkward 14 year old again, and reading my school report:

“Mark Owen needs to engage more with others or be more active to gain influence.”

“Mark Owen has the ability to generate actions and discussions”

“Mark Owen does not engage with very many influencers”

Here’s my score when this blog was written:

And here’s the link to the Klout site where you can read all the gory details over my score.

Now – what struck me as a bit annoying is that the Klout site states:

“The Klout Score is the measurement of your overall online influence.”

This seems to be based only on Twitter activity.

At least, if you read all the “Learn More” sections on the Klout site, there is no mention of anything else.

It is possible to include your Facebook activity into the mix, and Klout have raised $8.5 million to “take Klout to the next level” where they want to include more streams (LinkedIn etc), but until that happens, they should tell it like it is.

That is, the Klout score measures the influence someone has on Twitter! Even if they do include LinkedIn and Facebook, what about the influence that arises from blog posts, or comments on other people’s site. What about other social media avenues?

At the same time, not all influencers tweet regularly (in fact, I read a 2009 report by Baracuda Labs indicates that 73% of users have less than 10 tweets).

In fact, Matt Owen (no relation) did a very interesting “experiment” to test whether Klout was returning meaningful results. I definitely reccommend checking it out (link listed below).

Have a look at the links I have listed below, and let me know what you think – Is Klout a useful tool?

Relevant Links:

Mark Owen needs to engage more with others or be more active to gain influence.Mark Owen needs to engage more with others or be more active to gain influence.

2010 in review

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads This blog is on fire!.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 3,100 times in 2010. That’s about 7 full 747s.

In 2010, there were 87 new posts, not bad for the first year! There were 118 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 12mb. That’s about 2 pictures per week.

The busiest day of the year was October 27th with 137 views. The most popular post that day was Momentum Lisbon – Opening, and Technical Keynote..

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were linkedin.com, twitter.com, alphainventions.com, blog.simplediagrams.com, and en.wordpress.com.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for innovation and creativity, gravity apple, gravity newton, aiim certification vs microsoft, and newton gravity.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

Momentum Lisbon – Opening, and Technical Keynote. October 2010
1 comment

2

SharePoint 2007 vs SharePoint 2010 August 2010

3

What the Hell Am I Doing? (or “Should I just Shut Up?”) November 2010
9 comments

4

SharePoint 2010 Training/Certification – A comparison of the Microsoft & AIIM offerings August 2010
1 comment

5

Determining the real number of crawled documents in a SharePoint-Documentum system August 2010