Swedish band jj among the most blogged artists this week

The Swedish band jj are the second most blogged artists this week, according to The Hype Machine, which tracks artists on more than 1,000 music blogs. Sweden’s Robyn is moving up two spots to #4.

Most blogged artists on November 21 at 10 am GMT:

  1. Girl Talk (no change)
  2. jj (no change)
  3. Bikini (+3)
  4. Robyn (+2)
  5. Gorillaz (re-entry)
  6. Chromeo (re-entry)
  7. Patrick Wolf (new)
  8. The Morning Benders (re-entry)
  9. Jay Electronica (new)
  10. Jay-Z (new)

Listen to jj’s new single Let Them on The Hype Machine.

Source: The Independent.

The blogosphere is alive and kicking

Although my blog survey BlogSweden 5 indicated that bloggers are spending a little less time now on their blogs than last year, other statistics show that more people in Sweden write and read blogs. This weekend I attended the World Blogging Forum in Vienna and met bloggers from a number of different countries. One conclusion from all the discussions with other bloggers is that the Swedish blogosphere is quite different, with its heavy dominance by younger women and fashion blogs.

I wrote a guest post about the Swedish blogosphere on the World Blogging Forum site.

Don’t mess with Sweden on Twitter

Now and then we read stories about businesses that use Twitter in ways that are creative, but not considered to be according to Twitter etiquette. Perhaps you remember when Habitat UK spammed several Twitter hashtags like #iPhone or #Mousavi, a tag associated with the Iran election, with tweets promoting their furniture? It created an uproar among Twitter users and gave the company lots of negative publicity.

Update: After a conversation with @dohop and checking the ID numbers of each tweet, I see that the tweet from @swedense came seconds before the first tweet from @dohop, giving this story a slightly different meaning. In other words, the tweet from @swedense was not directed to @dohop at all, but to several other comments on Twitter. Sorry that I hadn’t discovered that before.

Sweden on Twitter
Today I found another interesting example (hat tip to Johan Hedberg) from a website called Dohop.com, a “flight search engine”. It tried to generate business out of a very sensitive topic, namely the Swedish election. On Sunday last week, Sweden for the first time elected an anti-immigrant party into the Swedish parliament. The Sweden Democrats got 20 seats in the parliament, sending shock waves through the entire Swedish society, and the election results are not even final yet. So obviously this is not a topic that Swedes would take lightly, but it did not stop @dohop from publishing the following tweet.

twitterdohop

However, Sweden.se, the official web presence of the Swedish Institute, would not take that kind of tweeting about our beloved country. So it sent out this rather upset tweet.

twitterswedense

Which got picked up by @dohop, who apologized.

twitterdohop2

I don’t know if there is a moral to this story, but if you are trying to be funny on Twitter on someone else’s expense, be prepared that they might be listening and talk back. Way to go, Sweden.se!

Social media as big as traditional media online

According to the survey “Mediebarometern 2009” (pdf in Swedish) by Nordicom, the share of Swedes that uses social media on an average day is as large as the share that uses traditional media online. Among Swedes (age 7-79 years), 26% use social media and 26% use traditional media online on an average day.

mediebarometern2009

The survey also reveals that nearly 65% of 15-24 year-olds participate in “social networking” on an average  day, while more than 50% of the young online users watch videos on YouTube.

*Social media is defined as social networks, communities, forums, chat or blogs. Traditional media is defined as newspaper, radio or tv.

Via Internetstatistik.se.

Infographic – if the Swedish blogosphere were 100 people

I have just compiled the statistics from my latest survey BlogSweden 5 (in Swedish: Bloggsverige 5) and a report was published in Swedish in the previous post. A total of 2,251 bloggers and blog readers answered the survey. A translation will be posted later.

In the meantime, below is an infographic that could represent the Swedish blogosphere in 2010, if it were 100 people.

100 people 2

A presentation of BlogSweden 4, conducted in 2009 can be found on Slideshare.

Note: Respondents were chosen by convenience sampling which means that the results of the survey is not statistically valid for all Swedish bloggers, but only for the respondents of the survey.