Best social media engagement periods, infographic rebooted

This is data-geekery, but sometimes I’ll run across diagrams with valuable information and they’re difficult to utilize because they’ve been designed to go viral, rather than with handiness in mind. This social media chart by @SumAll (sumall.com) is one of those. It has great information about the best and worst periods for posting content to a variety of social media channels. The problems are:

  • The color-coding doesn’t communicate anything useful other than the brands.
  • The time period numbers don’t align with the time they correspond to.
  • The timeline doesn’t communicate relevant context like the typical workday or daytime to reveal which networks are for night owls (e.g.).
  • The good and bad timelines are divorced, so you can’t see the “okay” periods.
  • The watch artwork serves no purpose other than visual noise because there’s no a.m./p.m. distinction.

Don’t make Tufte cry.

Here’s the Before

Social Media Engagement Periods - Before

Here’s the After

Social Media Engagement Periods

Now, sure. Their version may look more fun, with the cat and all. Mine is the one a social media person may print out and glance at though, without needing to mentally dissect the information through the cruft. What I focused on:

  • Order the networks from earliest to latest peak engagement periods, to allow someone to work down the list through the day.
  • Show highest and lowest periods, using tone more than color, to address color blindness concerns.
  • Mark “M” for midnight and “N” for noon, to avoid the awkward military time.
  • Show daylight hours and workday hours.

What would make it better? There’s always room for improvement:

  • Brand icons next to the names would give it a quicker visual scan.
  • I could add a color key, but I believe the meanings here are fairly apparent, so meh.

The first 24 hours with Peach, looking forward to 24 months

On the afternoon of January 8th, I observed a sudden and mysterious overuse of the peach emoji emoji in my Twitter feed. By the folks using it, I immediately knew a fresh app was on the loose and pivoted to Google where the trusty “peach app” query would turn up fruit (ba-dum-tss). Continue reading →