Weird, huh?
But for a topic to become a trend, it actually has to meet several criteria beyond just being “popular:”
► It has to have no foul language in it.
► It has to be popular with a lot of people in a short period of time—it has to “peak” in popularity.
► Total tweets AND the total number of people tweeting BOTH matter. But unless there are tweets from a lot of people—what Twitter calls “widespread popularity“—total tweets will NOT matter.
But that’s still not enough to become a trend! Even when a lot of people are tweeting about something, it won’t become a #TT unless it also meets one of these other criteria:
- It has to be a new topic that has never been popular before, or…
- It has to be a previously popular topic that has become popular with a new group of people.
2. Why Twitter Removes Still-Popular Topics From Trending:
Some popular topics stay on the #TT list for a long time because more and more newpeople start tweeting about them. But some topics continue to get tons of tweets for a long time, yet are removed from the #TT list quickly—because no new people begin tweeting about them.
The same people saying the same things will NOT keep a topic trending.
The classic example of a very popular topic that is NOT a #TT is Justin Bieber. #Bieber tweets are virtually always popular on Twitter, but it’s always the same people tweeting.
3. Why Twitter Stops Some Tweets About Political Events From Trending.
This is a very frustrating feature of how Twitter’s algorithm selects Trending Topics. Political events (or topics) can become deselected from the #TT in several ways:
► An event becomes “old news” before it happens
Scenario: People begin tweeting about the event in the days beforehand, and it becomes a #TT. But by the time the event arrives, it is “old news,” and unless a lot of new people begin tweeting about it, it won’t be on the #TT list anymore.
When #OccupyWallStreet trended everywhere worldwide, but not in the United Statespeople said Twitter censored it. Did they? No, because actually it hadpreviously trended in the U.S., and now there were no more new people in the U.S. talking about it—the new people talking about it were elsewhere in the world.
► An event fails to “peak” in popularity
Scenario: Thousands of people tweet about a topic. If the tweets are all sent out in the same few minutes, it could easily become a #TT. But if those people send their tweets out over the course of several days, the topic will likely not trend.
► It wasn’t blocked—you just missed it
I see this all the time. Topics trend briefly, then the algorithm determines they are no longer really “peaking” and so they are removed. And then people say “Why isn’t this trending?” It did trend, but you missed it.
► But I have proof Twitter censored something!
Okay, but I’ve checked many such claims, and in each case, a much simpler explanation was obvious. Plus, every “proof” I’ve ever seen has been based around how many tweets are being sent, and trending is not just about the volume of tweets. (Plus, if Twitter really wanted to censor something…wouldn’t it want to hide the tweets themselves?)
Some popular topics stay on the #TT list for a long time because more and more newpeople start tweeting about them. But some topics continue to get tons of tweets for a long time, yet are removed from the #TT list quickly—because no new people begin tweeting about them.
The same people saying the same things will NOT keep a topic trending.
The classic example of a very popular topic that is NOT a #TT is Justin Bieber. #Bieber tweets are virtually always popular on Twitter, but it’s always the same people tweeting.
3. Why Twitter Stops Some Tweets About Political Events From Trending.
This is a very frustrating feature of how Twitter’s algorithm selects Trending Topics. Political events (or topics) can become deselected from the #TT in several ways:
► An event becomes “old news” before it happens
Scenario: People begin tweeting about the event in the days beforehand, and it becomes a #TT. But by the time the event arrives, it is “old news,” and unless a lot of new people begin tweeting about it, it won’t be on the #TT list anymore.
When #OccupyWallStreet trended everywhere worldwide, but not in the United Statespeople said Twitter censored it. Did they? No, because actually it hadpreviously trended in the U.S., and now there were no more new people in the U.S. talking about it—the new people talking about it were elsewhere in the world.
► An event fails to “peak” in popularity
Scenario: Thousands of people tweet about a topic. If the tweets are all sent out in the same few minutes, it could easily become a #TT. But if those people send their tweets out over the course of several days, the topic will likely not trend.
► It wasn’t blocked—you just missed it
I see this all the time. Topics trend briefly, then the algorithm determines they are no longer really “peaking” and so they are removed. And then people say “Why isn’t this trending?” It did trend, but you missed it.
► But I have proof Twitter censored something!
Okay, but I’ve checked many such claims, and in each case, a much simpler explanation was obvious. Plus, every “proof” I’ve ever seen has been based around how many tweets are being sent, and trending is not just about the volume of tweets. (Plus, if Twitter really wanted to censor something…wouldn’t it want to hide the tweets themselves?)
4. Twitter BLOCKS Some Tweets From Counting Towards Trending Topics:
►Twitter counts people more than tweets
Remember, Twitter’s algorithm counts how many people are tweeting about something—not just total tweets. So the same person tweeting 50 times about the same topic canbe counted as “one person tweeting repeatedly about the topic” instead of “50 tweets about the topic.”
Twitter even says it could suspend your account if you “Repeatedly Tweet the same topic/hashtag without adding value to the conversation in an attempt to get the topic trending/trending higher.”
► Twitter doesn’t show all tweets in search results.
Tweets that do not show up in Twitter search results won’t be counted towards making a topic begin, restart or continue trending. Reasons tweets go missing can include:
► Some Tweets are penalized!
Do NOT do any of the things listed below! Not only will your tweets possibly NOT count towards trending topics, you could even have your Twitter account suspended:
5.What Is Twitter’s Secret Formula For Selecting Trending Topics?
While Twitter doesn’t reveal the exact formula, they have provided some details abouthow #TT’s are selected. The main things to remember are:
► Twitter may count total people tweeting more than total tweets.
► Twitter counts topics that are newly popular. This means topics must be “breaking” or “peaking” in order to trend.
► Topics that have been popular for awhile will not trend again (or will not keeptrending) unless new people begin tweeting about them in large numbers in a short period of time.
► If Twitter allowed simply whatever is being tweeted about the most to always trend, large groups could dominate the trending topics all the time. In fact, this is what used to happen before Twitter implemented its algorithm. The main group that dominated the #TT’s was…Justin Bieber fans.
Twitter says:
6. Why Twitter Will Be Censoring MORE Trending Topics In the Future.
As first reported on the TweetSmarter blog, Twitter is considering censoring “clearly offensive” topics in the future:
http://twitter.com/#!/dic kc/stat...
Tweet finder credit: @RachelSklar and @AbigailCollazo
Bonus: What Areas Can You View Twitter Trends For?
You can click to view what’s trending worldwide, what’s trending in your country, or what’s trending in your local area. Here are a couple of examples of country choices and local choices in the U.S.
►Twitter counts people more than tweets
Remember, Twitter’s algorithm counts how many people are tweeting about something—not just total tweets. So the same person tweeting 50 times about the same topic canbe counted as “one person tweeting repeatedly about the topic” instead of “50 tweets about the topic.”
Twitter even says it could suspend your account if you “Repeatedly Tweet the same topic/hashtag without adding value to the conversation in an attempt to get the topic trending/trending higher.”
► Twitter doesn’t show all tweets in search results.
Tweets that do not show up in Twitter search results won’t be counted towards making a topic begin, restart or continue trending. Reasons tweets go missing can include:
- Your profile has no name or bio.
- Your account was just created.
- You have almost never tweeted before.
- No one has ever responded to your tweets—you don’t converse, are never retweeted and never mentioned.
► Some Tweets are penalized!
Do NOT do any of the things listed below! Not only will your tweets possibly NOT count towards trending topics, you could even have your Twitter account suspended:
- Adding one or more topics/hashtags to an unrelated Tweet in an attempt to gain attention in search.
- Repeatedly Tweeting the same topic/hashtag without adding value to the conversation in an attempt to get the topic trending/trending higher.
- Tweeting about each trending topic in turn in order to drive traffic to your profile, especially when mixed with advertising.
- Listing the trending topics in combination with a request to be followed.
- Tweeting about a trending topic and posting a misleading link to something unrelated.
5.What Is Twitter’s Secret Formula For Selecting Trending Topics?
While Twitter doesn’t reveal the exact formula, they have provided some details abouthow #TT’s are selected. The main things to remember are:
► Twitter may count total people tweeting more than total tweets.
► Twitter counts topics that are newly popular. This means topics must be “breaking” or “peaking” in order to trend.
► Topics that have been popular for awhile will not trend again (or will not keeptrending) unless new people begin tweeting about them in large numbers in a short period of time.
► If Twitter allowed simply whatever is being tweeted about the most to always trend, large groups could dominate the trending topics all the time. In fact, this is what used to happen before Twitter implemented its algorithm. The main group that dominated the #TT’s was…Justin Bieber fans.
Twitter says:
“Twitter Trends are automatically generated by an algorithm that attempts to identify topics that are being talked about more right now than they were previously.
“The Trends list is designed to help people discover the ‘most breaking’ breaking news from across the world, in real-time. The Trends list captures the hottest emerging topics, not just what’s most popular. Put another way, Twitter favors novelty over popularity…”
6. Why Twitter Will Be Censoring MORE Trending Topics In the Future.
As first reported on the TweetSmarter blog, Twitter is considering censoring “clearly offensive” topics in the future:
http://twitter.com/#!/dic
Tweet finder credit: @RachelSklar and @AbigailCollazo
Bonus: What Areas Can You View Twitter Trends For?
You can click to view what’s trending worldwide, what’s trending in your country, or what’s trending in your local area. Here are a couple of examples of country choices and local choices in the U.S.