n. The Twitter social networking service and the people who use it. Also: twitterverse, Twitter-verse. [Blend of Twitter and universe.]
The word Twitterverse entered the lexicon of social media in a big way in the past few months. Its appeared on NPR (National Public Radio ) in the Washington Post, spawned a blog by Emily Chang, of Ideacodes in SF and the 1st or beta edition of a Twitterverse map.
I think the map is the best and possibly the least abstract representation of a fast emerging world and was produced by Brian Solis, Principal of FutureWorks, PR and New Media agency in Silicon Valley. He released a beta version of what he calls the Twitterverse v 0.9 last week ( see Gazing into the Twitterverse). What he and partner Jess3 have produced is a spiral universe that begins to place an order to a complex set of relationships surrounding Twitter from search, communication, mobile, analytics, relationship management, advertising and events. The spiral representation seems to be like that of solar system revolving around a central star in long tendrils representing a map of tools and applications for conversation management and measurement emanating from the vortex of Twitter.
So what does the word Twitterverse mean and where does it originate from?
The Urban Dictionary provides a broad user friendly meaning online. “the cyberspace area of twitter. This naturally extends beyond twitter.com to anywhere you can twitter, which includes cell phones.” It appears that the cyberspace area is largely undefined or is vague.
Wordspy , a blog on the word lovers guide to new words, attributes the origins of the word to Twitterverse to Adam Pasick, “SXSW and the Twitterverse,” Monkey Daemon, March 12, 2007
Adam described Twitter as “a sort of minute-by-minute blog that you send and receive from a computer or text message. All too often this takes the form of scintillating entries like “I’m eating breakfast,” and other stuff that you really don’t need to know about other people. But the allure at SXSW is that all the cool kids are doing it. So if you want to find the cool parties, you have to read Twitter. It’s geek clique chic.”
As Brian Solis’ graphic representation illustrates, the Twitterverse has evolved since those early days. The public, companies, the press, have all run to get on board to explore and exploit the platform as short form news, PR, promotion, and ideas to a range of tools that map the relationships between information sources, their conversations topics, circles of influence, and the broad sweep pf readers or “followers”.
To emphasize the size and significance of the microblogging platform Neilsen reports that time spent of time spent on Twitter has grown a phenomenal 3,712% in the past year. Who ever coined the phrase Twitterverse is watching in awe as this new universe take shape and form day by day.
Top 10 Social Networking and Blog Sites Ranked by Total Minutes for April 2009 and Their Year-over-Year Percent Growth (U.S., Home and Work)
| RANK | Site | Apr-08 Total Minutes (000) | Apr-09 Total Minutes (000) | Year-over-Year % Growth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1,735,698 | 13,872,640 | 699 | |
| 2 | Myspace.com | 7,254,645 | 4,973,919 | -31 |
| 3 | Blogger | 448,710 | 582,683 | 30 |
| 4 | Tagged.com | 29,858 | 327,871 | 998 |
| 5 | Twitter.com | 7,865 | 299,836 | 3712 |
| 6 | MyYearbook | 131,105 | 268,565 | 105 |
| 7 | LiveJournal | 54,671 | 204,121 | 273 |
| 8 | 119,636 | 202,407 | 69 | |
| 9 | SlashKey | N/A | 187,687 | N/A |
| 10 | Gaia Online | 173,115 | 143,909 | -17 |
| source: The Nielsen Company | ||||
Tags: conversations, social media, twitter





