I’ve been visiting Digg.com for a long time, and recently I’ve noticed that the volume of diggs for frontpage stories seems to have dropped. The last few months it has just seemed to me that there are a lot of stories on the homepage that have 200-300 diggs, where six months or a year ago I remember the vast majority of homepage stories having 500+ votes. So I decided to take a look.
Digg’s homepage includes a featured called “Top in All Topics,” which lists the ten most popular stories on the site, presumably for the last twenty four hours (it doesn’t say). Using the Wayback Machine, I went back and looked at how many diggs the top stories got on random days in the past compared to today. The chart below shows the range.
Date | Day of Week | Diggs for #1 Story | Diggs for #5 Story | Diggs for #10 Story |
Today | Friday | 2,186 | 833 | 571 |
4/1/2008 | Tuesday | 7,438 | 1,794 | 1,304 |
3/7/2008 | Wednesday | 2,344 | 1,360 | 870 |
7/12/2007 | Friday | 2,025 | 1,309 | 839 |
4/7/2007 | Saturday | 1,992 | 1,318 | 825 |
1/24/2007 | Thursday | 3,079 | 1,439 | 933 |
From my reading, this shows that the number of diggs for the very top story on Digg has remained fairly consistent the last two years, with the occasional blockbuster breaking the 5,000+ digg barrier. However, as you’ll see the number of votes for the fifth and tenth most popular stories on the site are much lower than in the past.
While my quick study is certainly unscientific and there could be an explanation that I’m missing, I think these findings are a pretty good indication that people aren’t digging as many stories as they did in the past. A drop in digging activity would be a pretty clear sign that the service is losing some traction.
As to why, my guess would be Twitter.
I personally have been using Digg less the last six months as Twitter has become my primary method for discovering new content. I suspect others are spending less time on Digg as well.
In addition, on many of the blogs and websites I work on (including this one) we’ve removed the “digg this” button we had traditionally used and replaced it with a retweet button. In the past three years, our blog has been on the homepage of Digg twice. Both times we got on the homepage due to a prominent Digg user finding our story – not because of our “digg this” button. So we gave up, and decided to focus on the retweet button instead since we weren’t getting much of a return from the Digg button. I suspect other designers are making similar decisions.
Do you buy my theory?
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