Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Want More 'Likes' On Facebook? Check Your Watch

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Jul, 2015 12:27 PM
    So your last Facebook post, on which you worked so much - giving smart twists to make it funny and awesome - did not garner any likes? Well, the fault may not be with the content but with timings, says a study.
     
    In all probability you posted that update at the wrong time.
     
    So when is the best time to post on Facebook? On weekdays during working hours, and then again between 7 pm and 8 pm, suggests the study, Bustle.com reported.
     
    On the weekends there's a major drop-off in reactions. Hence, if you are really feeling yourself on Friday evening, wait to post that photo on until Monday afternoon.
     
    "The probability that an audience member reacts to a message may depend on several factors, such as his daily and weekly behaviour patterns, his location or timezone, and the volume of other messages competing for his attention," said researchers from Lithium Technologies in San Francisco, who conducted the study.
     
    The US cities of San Francisco and New York exhibit similar shapes, where reactions peak at the beginning of work hours, the study said.
     
    For Paris, the reactions peak in the second half of working hours, while for London most reactions are expected towards the end of working hours.
     
    "This is important for businesses which are trying to connect with consumers in different areas, or if your new social media crush lives halfway across the globe," the researchers said.
     
    Also, if you want immediate gratification, Twitter might be the way to go. The study found that it sees bigger peaks in usage, has twice the chance of eliciting responses, and reaction times are much faster compared to Facebook.
     
    On Facebook it takes up to two hours for the first half of the responses to come in; on Twitter, however, most responses come within half an hour.
     
    The researchers then took their data set, which held timestamps from a huge number of posts (144 million, to be precise) and reactions (1.1 billion) over a 120-day period, and analysed it using Klout.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Coming soon: The tiniest battery in the world

    Coming soon: The tiniest battery in the world
    Researchers in the US have invented a battery that is so small that a billon of them could be crammed into a space the size of a postage stamp....

    Coming soon: The tiniest battery in the world

    Google signs 60-year lease with NASA

    Google signs 60-year lease with NASA
    In a bid to reduce costs and shed surplus property, the US space agency has signed a 60-year lease with Planetary Ventures LLC - a shell organisation operated....

    Google signs 60-year lease with NASA

    Pilot's wireless devices can be hacked, endanger flight

    Pilot's wireless devices can be hacked, endanger flight
     Apps and wireless devices which private airline pilots use while flying are vulnerable to a wide range of security attacks....

    Pilot's wireless devices can be hacked, endanger flight

    Instagram Hopes Canadians Will Barely Notice That They're Now Being Served Ads

    Instagram Hopes Canadians Will Barely Notice That They're Now Being Served Ads
    Now, after doubling Instagram's user base to more than 200 million and quadrupling the number of shared photos to 20 billion, Zuckerberg is trying to recoup that investment.

    Instagram Hopes Canadians Will Barely Notice That They're Now Being Served Ads

    Google Scholar turns 10 this month

    Google Scholar turns 10 this month
    Google Scholar, the free search engine for scholarly literature that has transformed the way scientists consult literature online, will turn 10 Nov 18....

    Google Scholar turns 10 this month

    How glass can help build super-fast computers

    How glass can help build super-fast computers
    New research demonstrates how glass could be manipulated to create a material that would allow computers to transfer information using light....

    How glass can help build super-fast computers