The rise of the super socials

superman-shieldSocial media strategist Jay Baer has come up with an interesting label for social media power users that I hope will stick. He calls them “super socials,” and as far as labels go, I think it’s a pretty good one.

Baer uses the term in his post 9 Surprising New Facts About Social Media in America, in which he shares a quick review of a new report about social media use. Baer reviewed Social Habit II, a new report from Edison Research and Arbitron that should be available soon.

Some of Baer’s conclusions weren’t all that shocking. The fact that the majority of Americans now use one or more social networks is no surprise. Nor was the news that Twitter, my social network of choice, is a thin sliver of the social media pie.

But the interesting thing to me was Baer’s fourth point, “The Emergence of the Super Socials.”

One-third of Americans with a profile on a social network, use those sites several times per day or more. This group of “super socials” (my label, not Edison’s) numbers 46 million, and increase of almost 20% in one year.

At least one table from the Social Habit II report calls super socials “Habitual Social Networkers,” so you can see why I prefer Baer’s term. It makes my use of social media sound less pathological.

Baer further defines super socials as:

  • In love with Twitter. They’re three times more active on Twitter than the total population.
  • In love with their smart phones. Fifty-six percent of super socials use smart phones, as opposed to 31 percent of the total population surveyed in this study.
  • More connected to brands via social media than the general population.

I think I fit the definition pretty well, although I’m not as connected to brands via social media than other super socials I know.

Based on this data, are you a super social?

A blog about anything

seinfeld1Warning: the following content has very little direct application to higher ed marketing.

Some random but in my view interesting links from my Twitter stream. I guess I could call them “curated,” but they’re probably too contextless to be that.

Comedy: 30 years of Seinfeld is now online. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

Branding: What the next five years will be about.

Music: Two new tracks from Arcade Fire.

Blogging: A former student blogger talks about working with student bloggers.

Bargains: Top 10 things you can get for free (or cheap).

Life: 38 lessons in 38 years. (I’ve been around 38-plus years but have probably learned more from this post than from anything I’ve read recently.)

Awesomeness: Kitten vs. Scary Monster. Video below.

Any contextless info you’d like to share? Please post in the comment box below.