The Twitter outlook

Last week in this blog post, we seen two drivers’ jump over one million followers. Last weekend, on the race track, one of those drivers’ won the Italian Grand Prix. But how did that affect the Twitter outlook? It is time, to reveal all…

Drivers – The Top 10
01 – 1,118,290 – Jenson Button (McLaren)
02 – 1,074,044 – Fernando Alonso (Ferrari)
03 – 1,053,948 – Lewis Hamilton (McLaren)
04 – 481,855 – Bruno Senna (Williams)
05 – 430,599 – Mark Webber (Red Bull)
06 – 267,796 – Sergio Perez (Sauber)
07 – 258,616 – Pastor Maldonaldo (Williams)
08 – 194,781 – Nico Rosberg (Mercedes)
09 – 175,663 – Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham)
10 – 173,898 – Pedro de la Rosa (HRT)

Drivers – Biggest Increases
01 – 37,168 – Fernando Alonso
02 – 25,321 – Lewis Hamilton
03 – 14,490 – Jenson Button
04 – 10,169 – Sergio Perez
05 – 6,363 – Mark Webber

Drivers – Smallest Increases
01 – 790 – Charles Pic
02 – 1,063 – Jean-Eric Vergne
03 – 1,083 – Timo Glock
04 – 1,275 – Daniel Ricciardo
05 – 1,548 – Kamui Kobayashi

No change inside the top ten, Romain Grosjean moves ahead of Kamui Kobayashi thanks to the start-line accident at the Belgian Grand Prix, and the one race ban that followed it. As I noted last week, after that Grand Prix, the ban spread far and wide on Twitter. Although I don’t intend to follow his follower progress, Jerome d’Ambrosio has nearly 22,000 followers at the time of writing this, which would put him ahead of Charles Pic. He is not a regular tweeter, however, but as far as I know that is his real account.

In terms of smallest and largest increases, Sergio Perez had the fourth largest increase, thanks to his second place in the Italian Grand Prix. Status quo remains at the opposite end of the table.

Teams – The Top 10
01 – 334,535 – Ferrari
02 – 230,688 – McLaren
03 – 154,092 – Red Bull
04 – 146,803 – Mercedes
05 – 134,269 – Lotus
06 – 85,707 – Caterham
07 – 79,852 – Marussia
08 – 76,713 – Force India
09 – 74,585 – Williams
10 – 74,068 – Sauber

Teams – Biggest Increases
01 – 6,952 – Ferrari
02 – 5,142 – McLaren
03 – 3,961 – Red Bull

Teams – Smallest Increases
01 – 986 – Toro Rosso
02 – 991 – Caterham
03 – 1,123 – Marussia

Interestingly, Ferrari’s raw gain is lower than last week, somewhat oddly. Further down, Sauber recorded their highest gain since the Spanish Grand Prix week, I’m certain that Sauber will be jumping up to seventh within the next few weeks.

Driver and Team statistics as of Monday 10th September 2012.

The Twitter outlook

After a frantic – and quite scary at times – Belgian Grand Prix weekend, the Formula 1 roller-coaster moves onto Italy for the Italian Grand Prix. If you were on Twitter over the weekend, you would have probably noticed one particular drivers’ tweets appear, and then disappear. Well, that has helped that driver jump over 1 million followers, in a week where a lot of records for this particular blog series went tumbling down.

Drivers – The Top 10
01 – 1,103,800 – Jenson Button (McLaren)
02 – 1,036,876 – Fernando Alonso (Ferrari)
03 – 1,028,627 – Lewis Hamilton (McLaren)
04 – 477,923 – Bruno Senna (Williams)
05 – 424,236 – Mark Webber (Red Bull)
06 – 257,627 – Sergio Perez (Sauber)
07 – 254,819 – Pastor Maldonaldo (Williams)
08 – 191,254 – Nico Rosberg (Mercedes)
09 – 172,677 – Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham)
10 – 169,882 – Pedro de la Rosa (HRT)

Drivers – Biggest Increases
01 – 50,110 – Fernando Alonso
02 – 45,223 – Lewis Hamilton
03 – 21,180 – Jenson Button
04 – 7,620 – Mark Webber
05 – 7,298 – Felipe Massa

Drivers – Smallest Increases
01 – 712 – Charles Pic
02 – 936 – Jean-Eric Vergne
03 – 1,011 – Timo Glock
04 – 1,694 – Daniel Ricciardo
05 – 1,894 – Kamui Kobayashi

Last week I predicted Fernando Alonso would jump to over one million followers. That has happened. What I didn’t predict is that Lewis Hamilton would join him. The reason I didn’t predict that is because of this:

A comparison of the amount of Twitter followers Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton have gained per week between April 2012 and September 2012.

The graph above shows that this past week’s gain by Hamilton is his largest yet since I started doing this blog by a considerable margin, his previous highest was thanks to his victory in the Hungarian Grand Prix. Irrespective of whether his tweets this past weekend were right or wrong, it seems to have done him well in the Twitter stakes, that is for sure, pushing him above one million followers earlier than I anticipated. It now leaves a somewhat bizarre situation in that we have three drivers’ over one million followers, and then a large gap, with no one between 500,000 and one million! Further down, Felipe Massa’s large gain (by his standards) has moved him ahead of Paul di Resta.

Teams – The Top 10
01 – 327,583 – Ferrari
02 – 225,546 – McLaren
03 – 150,131 – Red Bull
04 – 144,598 – Mercedes
05 – 131,426 – Lotus
06 – 84,716 – Caterham
07 – 78,729 – Marussia
08 – 74,874 – Force India
09 – 73,461 – Williams
10 – 71,618 – Sauber

Teams – Biggest Increases
01 – 8,282 – Ferrari
02 – 4,563 – McLaren
03 – 3,599 – Red Bull

Teams – Smallest Increases
01 – 826 – Williams
02 – 910 – Toro Rosso
03 – 1,053 – Caterham

A huge team gain by Ferrari extends their gap at the front, and is also a record high gain for them since I started this series of blog posts.

Driver and Team statistics as of Monday 3rd September 2012.

Twitter goes retweeting crazy as F1 journalists break the Grosjean news

Romain Grosjean has been banned from the Italian Grand Prix as a result of the multiple car pile up at the start of the Belgian Grand Prix. Within seconds of the decision being announced, Twitter lighted up with a lot of Formula 1 journalists tweeting the news instantly, and others favouriting and retweeting it. The first on my particular timeline to break the news was Ian Parkes. The following is based on my timeline from 16:41 to 16:51, with the amount of times each tweet has been retweeted and favourited up to about 17:20/17:25 UK time.

16:41 – Ian Parkes (Press Association) – 210 retweets, 5 favourites
16:41 – Pete Gill (Sky Sports) – 214 retweets
16:42 – Simon Strang (AUTOSPORT) – 10 retweets
16:43 – Jonathan Noble (AUTOSPORT) – 197 retweets, 10 favourites
16:43 – Jennie Gow (BBC) – 31 retweets
16:43 – Andrew Benson (BBC) – 118 retweets, 2 favourites
16:44 – Will Buxton (SPEED) – 17 retweets, 1 favourite
16:44 – Adam Cooper – 92 retweets
16:45 – Tom Cary (Daily Telegraph) – 20 retweets, 1 favourite
16:46 – Joe Saward – 9 retweets
16:46 – Dimi Papadopoulos – 3 retweets
16:46 – Sky Sports F1 – 536 retweets, 14 favourites
16:47 – Jake Humphrey (BBC) – 727 retweets, 50 favourites
16:49 – F1Fanatic.co.uk – 23 retweets
16:50 – Natalie Pinkham (Sky) – 9 retweets, 1 favourite
16:51 – Lee McKenzie – 281 retweets, 17 favourites

From those 16 tweets, which all say the same thing in one way or another, the most retweeted tweet comes from Jake Humphrey, despite reporting the news six minutes later than the first tweet in the list, thanks to his large amount of followers, especially some with probably little interest in Formula 1. The 16 tweets were retweeted by a massive 2,497 users (you can probably minus 5 percent off that for those that retweeted multiple of the above), while if you include the favourites column, that number increases to 2,598 tweets, although favourites don’t appear on other people’s timelines while retweets do.

As I outline every week in my blog, half of the Formula 1 drivers currently have over 100,000 followers, but over in broadcasting, the Sky Sports F1 account has 154,434 followers which would place it sixth in that list, while Jake Humphrey has nearly 600,000 followers which would place him fourth in the drivers’ list!

Of course, most of the above 16 accounts are Formula 1 specific accounts, more general accounts tend to have a lot more followers, and therefore are likely to get retweeted more often. Either way, the above is just a look at how far and wide 16 tweets can go on the “Twitter universe”. If we didn’t have Twitter chances are you wouldn’t have found that out until a few hours later, or via some other medium, such as a news channel, but because of Twitter the news was found instantly and retweeted to thousands of other people.

The Twitter outlook

This weekend Formula 1 finally roars back into action with the Belgian Grand Prix. But before then, it is my August update of the Twitter outlook alongside my usual weekly Twitter posts.

Drivers
01 – 1,082,620 – Jenson Button (McLaren)
02 – 986,766 – Fernando Alonso (Ferrari)
03 – 983,404 – Lewis Hamilton (McLaren)
04 – 473,618 – Bruno Senna (Williams)
05 – 416,616 – Mark Webber (Red Bull)
06 – 253,191 – Sergio Perez (Sauber)
07 – 250,733 – Pastor Maldonaldo (Williams)
08 – 187,844 – Nico Rosberg (Mercedes)
09 – 169,780 – Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham)
10 – 165,797 – Pedro de la Rosa (HRT)
11 – 146,567 – Paul di Resta (Force India)
12 – 143,668 – Felipe Massa (Ferrari)
13 – 129,134 – Narain Karthikeyan (HRT)
14 – 88,523 – Vitaly Petrov (Caterham)
15 – 79,869 – Nico Hulkenberg (Force India)
16 – 79,321 – Timo Glock (Marussia)
17 – 68,643 – Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber)
18 – 65,319 – Romain Grosjean (Lotus)
19 – 41,606 – Daniel Ricciardo (Toro Rosso)
20 – 29,244 – Jean-Eric Vergne (Toro Rosso)
21 – 17,505 – Charles Pic (Marussia)

Despite it being a quiet month for racing, there are two changes since July’s big update, as Fernando Alonso has jumped Lewis Hamilton and Nico Hulkenberg has overtaken Timo Glock. Assuming Alonso starts making gains of over 30,000 followers per week like before the Summer break, then he should be over 1 million followers by this time next week.

Drivers – Increases
01 – 41,081 – Fernando Alonso (n/a)
02 – 29,759 – Lewis Hamilton (n/a)
03 – 25,617 – Jenson Button (n/a)
04 – 13,526 – Pastor Maldonaldo (up 4)
05 – 12,102 – Bruno Senna (n/a)
06 – 11,934 – Mark Webber (down 2)
07 – 10,350 – Sergio Perez (down 1)
Average driver = 9,227
08 – 9,794 – Felipe Massa (down 1)
09 – 4,859 – Pedro de la Rosa (n/a)
10 – 4,792 – Narain Karthikeyan (up 4)
11 – 4,460 – Vitaly Petrov (up 6)
12 – 4,414 – Paul di Resta (down 1)
13 – 4,377 – Nico Rosberg (down 3)
14 – 4,001 – Romain Grosjean (down 2)
15 – 3,697 – Heikki Kovalainen (down 2)
16 – 2,080 – Kamui Kobayashi (n/a)
17 – 1,928 – Nico Hulkenberg (up 1)
18 – 1,623 – Daniel Ricciardo (down 3)
19 – 1,309 – Timo Glock (n/a)
20 – 1,193 – Jean-Eric Vergne (n/a)
21 – 865 – Charles Pic (n/a)

The up and down positions above is a comparison to their position in the same table last month. The raw values, though, are not directly comparable as July was a five week month, whereas August is a four week month. Pastor Maldonaldo and Vitaly Petrov are the drivers’ recording the biggest gains in comparison to their July position, although in Petrov’s case he is in a massive gaggle from 9th onwards, only a thousand followers separate 9th and 14th! Maybe it suggests that the first eight have a large fanbase, whereas the other drivers’ don’t have a significant fanbase? Just a thought…

Teams
01 – 319,301 – Ferrari
02 – 220,983 – McLaren
03 – 146,532 – Red Bull
04 – 142,671 – Mercedes
05 – 128,405 – Lotus
06 – 83,663 – Caterham
07 – 77,629 – Marussia
08 – 73,654 – Force India
09 – 72,635 – Williams
10 – 69,540 – Sauber
11 – 58,327 – HRT
12 – 47,775 – Toro Rosso

Red Bull have moved in front of Mercedes, as predicted last month, while Force India and Williams exchange positions again.

Teams – Increases
01 – 6,674 – Ferrari (n/a)
02 – 6,574 – Red Bull (n/a)
03 – 4,985 – McLaren (n/a)
04 – 4,270 – Lotus (n/a)
Average team = 3,246
05 – 2,700 – Mercedes (up 2)
06 – 2,613 – Sauber (down 1)
07 – 2,545 – Marussia (down 1)
08 – 2,515 – Force India (up 3)
09 – 1,789 – Caterham (up 1)
10 – 1,620 – HRT (down 2)
11 – 1,430 – Toro Rosso (up 1)
12 – 1,232 – Williams (down 3)

After moving up in July, Williams again record the lowest increase of the month, as they did in June.

Driver and Team statistics as of Monday 27th August 2012.

The Twitter outlook

There may be one significant change in the drivers’ table, but that didn’t stop the average increase numbers hitting record lows, with an average increase of 1,956 followers for the 21 drivers active on Twitter. With just ten days to go to Belgium (phew!), here’s the Twitter numbers that you need:

Drivers – The Top 10
01 – 1,077,218 – Jenson Button (McLaren)
02 – 977,311 – Fernando Alonso (Ferrari)
03 – 976,948 – Lewis Hamilton (McLaren)
04 – 471,038 – Bruno Senna (Williams)
05 – 413,866 – Mark Webber (Red Bull)
06 – 251,310 – Sergio Perez (Sauber)
07 – 247,773 – Pastor Maldonaldo (Williams)
08 – 186,629 – Nico Rosberg (Mercedes)
09 – 168,833 – Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham)
10 – 164,671 – Pedro de la Rosa (HRT)

Drivers – Biggest Increases
01 – 9,126 – Fernando Alonso
02 – 6,445 – Lewis Hamilton
03 – 3,757 – Jenson Button
04 – 2,803 – Mark Webber
05 – 2,730 – Bruno Senna

Drivers – Smallest Increases
01 – 202 – Charles Pic
02 – 264 – Timo Glock
03 – 309 – Jean-Eric Vergne
04 – 346 – Daniel Ricciardo
05 – 439 – Nico Hulkenberg

Thanks to gaining three more thousand followers than Lewis Hamilton, Fernando Alonso is now in second place in the drivers’ table! At the beginning of July, I predicted that Alonso would overtake Hamilton in the Summer break and that is exactly what has materialised.

Teams – The Top 10
01 – 317,786 – Ferrari
02 – 219,764 – McLaren
03 – 145,182 – Red Bull
04 – 141,913 – Mercedes
05 – 127,382 – Lotus
06 – 83,147 – Caterham
07 – 76,935 – Marussia
08 – 72,961 – Force India
09 – 72,450 – Williams
10 – 68,576 – Sauber

Teams – Biggest Increases
01 – 1,625 – Red Bull
02 – 1,604 – Ferrari
03 – 1,047 – McLaren

Teams – Smallest Increases
01 – 180 – Williams
02 – 354 – Toro Rosso
03 – 385 – Sauber

Williams and Force India swap places again, something I expect to continue until the season ends. Sauber makes its first appearance in the bottom three as well. One thing that can influence the placings in the Summer break is how often the drivers and teams tweet, some may shut up shop while others may choose to continue tweeting. In the case of Sauber, they went on holiday from the 4th to the 18th August, with a tweet on the 18th wishing Chelsea good look, followed by more tweets yesterday.

Driver and Team statistics as of Monday 20th August 2012.