Their algorithm turns out to be far better at predicting how far a link will travel than counting followers, and is even better than the PageRank algorithm that powers the search results delivered by Google.
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It’s called IP-Influence, and its predictive power reveals two facts important to anyone who wants to spread their message on Twitter:
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1. The overwhelming majority of people on Twitter are passive – that is, they rarely if ever retweet anything.
2. The best predictor of how far a tweet or link will travel on Twitter is how much power its originator has to motivate the most passive of his or her followers to retweet it.
A user’s IP-Influence does not correlate well with the number of followers they have, which explains why, among Twitter’s most influential handles, Indonesian filmmaker Joko Anwar stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Google. Here, according to the HP analysis, are Twitter’s most influential accounts, as measured by their ability to get their links retweeted and subsequently clicked on:
Future applications of this algorithm could allow savvy twitter watchers to accurately predict what topics and links are going to go viral on Twitter before they actually do. From the paper:
Content ranking. The predictive power of IP-influence can be used for content filtering and ranking in order to reveal content that is most likely to receive attention based on which users mentioned that content early on. Similarly, as in the case of users, this can be computed on a per-topic or per-user-group basis.