Steemit Monthy Churn Rate Drops to 35%
Warning....Incoming Good News.....
Churn is a fact of life in business. You will win new users and you will lose users. Churn can be calculated by the following formula
Churn = Number of Active users at the beginning of the period + New registrations – Number of Active users at the end of the period.
Churn rate can be calculated using
Churn rate = Churn / Number of Active users at the beginning of the period
“While churn is not necessarily a bad thing for all businesses, a high churn rate compared to your competitors can be a troubling sign. For social media and advertising platforms, it can suggest a lack of engagement and loyalty among the user base – and increased consumer dissatisfaction with the platform at large. Especially for companies that rely on advertising revenue, the lack of a consistent, engaged audience could jeopardize key business models and monetization strategies.”
Source https://www.vertoanalytics.com/chart-week-social-media-networks-churn/
Repository
https://github.com/steemit/condenser
Aim of Analysis
The aim of this analysis is to calculated the churn rate on Steemit for Q2 of 2018 and compare this to Q1. You can view the Q1 Churn report here
https://steemit.com/utopian-io/@paulag/steemit-churn-rates-q1-2018
All data for this analysis was taken from Steemsql held and managed by @arcange. As to not distract from the data, I will first present the findings and then the queries used.
Weekly Churn Q2
The table above shows the number of new accounts registered per week, the distinct count of votes, the discount of authors, the distinct user count (either voted or posted/commented), the weekly churn and the weekly churn rate.
The churn rate varies considerably from week to week as it is dependent on two variables. The distinct users and The number of new accounts. As both of these variables vary from week to week it is expected to see this variation reflected in the churn rates.
In Q1 the average weekly churn rate was 22% and the median was 20%. Q2 the average weekly churn reduced to 14% and the median 13.7%
Monthly Churn 2018
As with the weekly churn rates you would expect to see a variance on the monthly churn rates as the variable also change. the number of new accounts registered each month droped considerably from Jan to June(76%). However the distinct user is smoother when looked at monthly over weekly and from Jan to June has only reduced by 30%. On a monthly basis this has resulted in a churn rate drop from 68% in Jan to 35% in June.
Both the average and the median monthly churn rates for the first 4 months was 59% and for the first 6 months this has reduced to 52%
Quarterly Churn Rates
In Q1 of 2018 Steemit lost more active users than gained. The churn rate was 121%
Q2 churn rate has reduced to 75%.
Using this as a comparative figure against the social media sites in the image above. Facebook was reporting a churn rate Q3 to Q4 of only 2.8%, Snapchat 23.5%, Instagram 19.1%, Twitter 25.3% and Kick 33%. I was unable to source more recent data and I was also unable to source churn rates for Reddit. If you do have this information, please do comment below as it would add value to this post.
Specific Churn Rates
In a previous request from @davemccoy he asked that I calculated churn using the following
"active users" as those members that post or comment in the preceding 2 week period of time
Calculating churn rates this was results in a higher monthly churn, with January showing that Steemit lost more active users than gained. However come June, we can see a notable reduction in churn.
Conclusion
Churn is a fact of any business. What is an acceptable level of churn is also a business choice but the reality is, the lower this number the better. Calculating monthly churn in both ways as above show that Steemit has a monthly churn of between 35% and 48% for June. This is a vast improvement on earlier months this year. A Q1 churn rate of 121% was very disappointing to see. 75% qtr churn is such a massive improvement.
The biggest factor is the reduced number of new accounts signing up. 55% less accounts in Q2 over Q1. There was only 25% less distinct accounts active.
What are your thoughts on the churn rates above? What reflection do they give about Steemit? Please do comment below
My thoughts - An Opportunity
My thoughts on this are rather positivist and I expect Q3 will show further reductions in churn. The are many project and initiatives ran on and off the chain that are working hard towards improving retention, such as the League of Excellence by @abh12345 and the work done by @meno with @helpie and @aggroed with #msp.
I also feel the Dapps are contributing to this decrease in churn, as these high SP accounts allow for focused curation. I think it would be worth analyzing churn on the Dapps, but that was outside the scope of this analysis.
I think the lower number of accounts is a good thing. Not only does it have a major impact on churn, but it also gives us a more manageable intake for on boarding and should allow us find quality steemains easier.
Price and the general state of the crypto market has an impact on the number of new users.
All of this combined gives us an opportunity. With a reduction in churn, and a more manageable number of accounts to filter and with Dapps curating. Could we be in a position to see a growth in the number of dolphins on Steemit? I believe we could be. Steemit is lacking a pod of dolphins swimming around spreading upvotes and value. I don't feel positive about the crypto market in general for the next 12 months and if in that time, we can grow a massive pod of awesome dolphins, Steemit will be in an awesome position when the market turns for crypto and blochchain takes off in 12 months. ( I have a crystal ball....don't worry it will happen...but don't take this as financial or trading advice...)
The Queries
As mentioned I used Steemsql and PowerBI to gather and model the data. The query used to get the unique voters was
SELECT voter, timestamp FROM Txvotes (NOLOCK) where timestamp >= CONVERT(DATE,'2018-04-01') and timestamp< CONVERT(DATE,'2018-07-01')
The query used to get the unique authors was
SELECT author, timestamp FROM Txcomments (NOLOCK) where timestamp >= CONVERT(DATE,'2018-04-01') and timestamp< CONVERT(DATE,'2018-07-01')
To get the total unique users, I combined both of the above queries and then ran distinct counts on the name.
The query used to get the number of new accounts was
Select name, created FROM Accounts (NOLOCK)
Good news!
I agree with you, and also with what @tarazkp is saying with regards to the (possible) price stabilization being a driver.
Less new sign-ups, fewer leavers, that'll do for now. I wonder what 'Velocity' will bring to Q3?
Cheers
Asher [@utopian-io - Analysis - Community Manager]
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Thank you for your review, @abh12345!
So far this week you've reviewed 2 contributions. Keep up the good work!
Thank you for your review, @abh12345!
So far this week you've reviewed 2 contributions. Keep up the good work!
due to your statistics we all know what's going on on steemit... thank you again... 😊 It's still a long long way to reach 'middle class' - it should be easier... @peekbit
thank you. I think it will be easier to reach middle class now than 6 months ago for sure. its a bit crazy how positive I am. Glad you like the posts. thanks for stopping by
Maybe we are 'at the bottom' now where those who are left are more likely to stay through the thick and thin of price swings. This means that those joiining up may still suffer a high attrition but the core will be more stable. In time as the survivors move to the core, perhaps a point will be reached where the core is a large enough mass to hold newbiew here.
That's an interesting thought @tarazkp. I have noticed that despite the poor user retention rate, those who remain tend to be quite active. Barring some extreme development to pushes even those most loyal users away, it should result in the scenario you mentioned. Eventually with a large enough core user base, more new users could remain.
However, the clique-ish vibe of current Steemit with automated, paid, and circle-jerk voting will continue to be off-putting to those who don't understand the underlying technology/atmosphere of the community here. Then of course we still have a terrible UI, no instant messaging, and a front end that automatically makes posts over a year old invisible.
To stick around on Steemit presently means having a huge dose of patience and an even bigger dose of optimism.
I definitely understand the concerns.
I wrote a post today (which I will link at the bottom because I write several each day) concerning some potentials for SMTs, competition for users etc. When it comes to some aspects like bidbots and the delegations that support them, it potentially might lose favour as a passive income if SMTs choose to do something like reward for curation and delegation to them instead. Plus, they could easily implement airdrops on active SP, not delegated. That way, those delegating to bots would lose the possibility to take advantage of their full wallet.
As far as UI goes, I think there are going to be a host of options that will eventually make Steemit obsolete or, change its core function. Being a catch all isn't doing it favours. Hivemind will bring new options for Devs and will make analysing the chain much easier which means the devs will have some number support to direct them rather than guesses.
It is hard to see all of the possibility through all of the
shitdrama but, there is a massive amount held here and hopefully, we as a community can overcome ourselves to make this place something not only entertaining, but useful for a wide variety of cases.today's post mentioned:
https://steemit.com/steem/@tarazkp/cross-blockchain-competition-and-smts
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" In time as the survivors move to the core, perhaps a point will be reached where the core is a large enough mass to hold newbiew here" this is sooooo my vision for steemit
Mine too. I am working myself to the bone, if not the core for it.
Mine, too. And I believe there are multiple "cores" out there, each working towards a similar goal. We just need a bigger more organized "middle class" as @tarazkp has talked about on numerous occasions. I'm talking about people who have worked hard and are "seeing results." They might have as little as 1000SP and they might have 50000SP or more. They are active, they interact a LOT, they create and participate in contests... often designed to help newcomers. Whether it's your redfish "wall of fame," or Asher's leagues, or Newbie Contests or whatever else... these are all good bases to work from.
There was an interesting comment on Asher's most recent "curation league" post where someone had used @penguinpablo's stats combined with Asher's list to calculate that the top 100 on his league list possibly creating as much as 5% of all posts on Steemit... and they account for less than 0.2% of "active" users.
I think the "gamification" of social media DOES work if applied properly. Just imagine the impact a group like that could have if it even doubled, or tripled in size. I don't have the data handy, but I seem to recall someone else calculating that retention within the leagues is multiples higher than the community as a whole.
It is amazing what an engaged mind and person can do.
I actually think it was a @paulag post.
Number of dolphins is going to increase for sure!
All the people who keeps posting, voting and commenting have the power to become a dolphin if they accumulate as much SP as possible during these period of time.
Excellent work @paulag
this is the best time to be on steemit :-)
I’d love to see an analysis of the retention rate of Partiko users. Last I saw it was around 50% retention.
Posted using Partiko iOS
I think that would be more accurate and interesting but the Android app only said it had 1000 downloads so it is a small sample size. Plus they could decide to use Steepshot or eSteem for multiple pics.
too small and new to get any meaningful insights.
I have certainly seen more and more Partiko tagged comments showing up. I don't personally use mobile for posting anything, but I know a lot of people do.
At least that's a sign the bleeding is being stemmed.
I think that with upcoming September HF the Dapps will get more of an edge and with an environment that is more favorable to large account holding Dapps, we might see a race for people collaborating more than ever.
Interesting set of stats @paulag. Perhaps what you're uncovering here is that most of what I might call the "fairweather players" have left for their perception of greener pastures.
Now if we can only persuade the next set of inbound people that this is a great venue to "create CONTENT with the possibility of REWARDS" rather than "EARN MONEY doing whatever you feel like to rape the system" then we might seriously be able to turn some kind of corner.
Well this is a bit encouraging. I guess the site aint dead yet!! I do believe the dapps are foundational.
we are far from dead
I think we're far from dead... and I think we've been going through a bit of sorting process for the last few months, where the dedicated are being sorted from the "fairweather players."
If Steem suddenly pops back up to $5 there is now more of a defined "core" of users, and we have a little more experience... I'd like to think we now have the wisdom to "laser focus" on the returnees and new users during the next upturn, and accurately throw support at those who seem likely to be long term contributors... and not as much at those just looking to harvest a quick free handout.
TBH ..I did not read the whoel article and I thought I would just ask you...
Churn rate is down but I would imagine the overall volume of sign up is down as well ? if that is correct , we are looking at a highly motivated sub group which would explain the drop in churn rate.
If not , I am really really excited to hear this news.
having a highly motivated sub group will be the core of steemit as it moves forward
Agree with that , highly motivated group is a pre-requisite.
I would not see that as a sign as improvement in churn rate , I imagine these folks have been here all along (mostly) and crypto crazies ( just like me).
A better reflection of improvement in churn rate would be inclusive of the normies of the world.
IMHO.
35% of 37,000 is actually worse than 42% from 60,000. Surely it's all about the net active numbers isn't it?
No good news here.
now that you put it that way...
I am still bullish on STEEM though..