Is the 1% participation rule dead? The BBC thinks so

The UK online population is no longer content to lurk in forums and on websites without contributing, with 77% of us now actively participating in digital media in some way.

This, according to the BBC, signals the death of the 1% rule.

For those unfamiliar with it, the 1% rule states that in any given online community only 1% will create content, 9% will edit or modify that content and the rest will consume the content without contributing.

It is the web’s version of the Pareto principle, which is also known as the 80:20 rule. However new research by the BBC suggests that the 1% rule is now outdated.

The Beeb surveyed 7,500 UK adults to find out how they participate in digital media “from sharing links, to writing blogs and uploading photos”.

The results indicate that the number of people participating online is significantly higher than 10%, with the increase driven by the rise of "easy participation".

Activities which may have once required great effort but now are relatively easy, expected and every day. 60% of the UK online population now participates in this way, from sharing photos to starting a discussion.

But despite participation becoming easier, almost a quarter of people (23%) remain passive and do not participate at all.

Interestingly, the level of participation is not necessarily dictated by digital literacy, as 11% of the passive group are also early adopters.

Digital participation now is best characterised through the lens of choice. These are the decisions we take about whether, when, with whom and around what, we will participate. Because participation is now much more about who we are, than what we have, or our digital skill.

As a result, the BBC has come up with a new model for digital participation it calls ‘The Participation Choice”:

But does this necessarily mean we need to rethink how we view online engagement?

As GigaOm points out, the 1% rule does not refer to the number of people participating with content across the web as a whole, instead it refers to the number of users creating content within a particular online community.

Social media plugins and apps mean it is easier than ever to share or post comments, so it’s no real surprise that 77% of us participate in some way.

But this ignores the fact that we behave differently in different places. For example, I have friends who are extremely active on Facebook but only use Twitter to follow celebrities.

So while the way we participate online will undoubtedly evolve over time, is the BBC right to claim that the 1% rule is dead?

In my view it seems far-fetched to suggest that on any given blog you can expect more than three-quarters of users to participate.

David Moth is a Senior Reporter at Econsultancy. You can follow him on Twitter or Google+

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Reader comments (5)

  1. Avatar-blank-50x50 David Cushman

    11:46AM on 8th May 2012

    I said as much in July 2010. Glad to see the BBC catching up...
    http://fasterfuture.blogspot.co.uk/2010/07/participation-is-new-default.html

  2. Panos Ladas Panos Ladas

    Digital Marketing Manager at Piece of Cake

    12:59PM on 8th May 2012

    It depends on what you define as content. If content is a status update or 140 characters on twitter or even this comment, then yes, I agree with you that more people create content.

    But is it fare to describe my comment and your blog post, equally as content? Is it of the same value to your visitors and readers? Are they getting the same kind of eyeballs?

  3. Avatar-blank-50x50 Francois Nel

    2:50PM on 9th May 2012

    The stats are indeed interesting, but I would caution those in the mainstream media who think that a general upswing in online interactivity necessarily means that more people will engage with them.

  4. Avatar-blank-50x50 Peter Thomson

    3:27PM on 9th May 2012

    So the BBC surveyed 7,500 people? The rule was first proven by Google using YouTube data sets from tens of millions of visits and interactions. It will take a lot more than a survey to shift a solid observation of human behaviour.

    It's a little bit dangerous to survey people about their own behaviour. If the BBC ran a survey asking what shows people watched I'm sure we'd all say documentaries and the news. But X-Factor continues to get ratings because people's behaviour doesn't always match their stated intentions.

  5. Avatar-blank-50x50 Dan Wardle

    9:48PM on 9th May 2012

    I am curious, what ratios does econsultancy see to its pages in terms of visitors vs comments vs tweeters etc?

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