Google+ might be heading for 100 million registered users but many of
them appear to be spending almost no time on the service, market
analysis company ComScore has reported.
According to figures made public through the Wall Street Journal, in
January Google+ users spent a trifling average of three minutes using
the site during the month, slightly lower than for December.
For perspective, Facebook managed almost seven hours per user in the
same month, a gulf in use far more dramatic than mere subscriber numbers
alone.
Elsewhere, Pinterest and Tumblr averaged 89 minutes, LinkedIn 17
minutes and MySpace only 8 minutes. Twitter, a popular site by any
definition, managed 21 minutes.
Part of the difference could be down to the different way the sites
are being used, with Facebook offering more that draws users into
wasting spending time on the site.
The length of time Google+ has been around is also against it as it
means it will have a smaller number of committed, heavy users that raise
the activity averages ComScore is monitoring.
A less sociable zeitgeist might not be helping newcomers such as
Google+. Last week a report noted that Facebook users appear to be
becoming more choosy about who they friend,
tightening up privacy settings and unfriending those they have little
interest in. Two thirds of women now claim to set privacy to the highest
level possible on the service.
http://www.pcworld.com
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