Interesting Observations

blogging, social media and self-improvement!

Male-Female Ratios of 50 Most Influential Blogs and some

I read the top 50 most influential bloggers list posted by Northxeast the other day as you all must have too. As is expected from most of such list posts, its being read and linked to even today by many. What intrigued me about this list was that it did not include a lot of the female bloggers who are equally or even more popular in some cases. As I was contemplating who got included and how many female bloggers were left out and such things, I also was thinking that it is possible there are fewer female bloggers than male bloggers – obviously, but then I read Shona’s post over at rich minx along similar thoughts, which revealed there were only 6 female bloggers listed in that top 50 most influential bloggers!! This is obviously a very interesting observation and I wonder why there are only 6 bloggers, why are not more females included in the list? I am by no means undermining the female bloggers included in that list, but I do feel that emomsathome by Wendy, successful-blog by Liz and the all encompassing WordPress blog by Lorelle and Search Engine Guide by Jennifer Laycock are blogs that are known to provide unparalleled support to the blogging community and definitely needed a mention in that list.

As I thought more about this, I was wondering if majority of the girls were even reading some of the most popular blogs or they limit themselves to reading just the ones in close proximity of their own communities or friends’ blogs! I personally have known and sporadically read most (not all) of the blogs listed in the top 50 and I was curious as to how many females read those blogs or even knew about them. So of course to quench my thirst, I used a nifty little tool that was created by Philipp Lenssen, author of Google Blogoscoped, to check out the male/female ratios of these blogs.

I checked the top 50 blogs listed by Northxeast (some couldn’t be found by the tool which is a bit odd) but also included some of the blogs I read along with of course the female bloggers that I think should have been included in that list. Most of the ratios seem intuitive when you think about the site, but I was particularly surprised at Chris Garrette’s blog in that only 2% of the females are reading his blog! So here are the he/she ratios of the popular sites:

techcrunch
pronetadvertising
engadget
talkingpointsmemo
huffingtonpost
alistapart
blogherald
problogger
smashingmagazine
digg
instapundit
kottke
sethgodin.typepad
seomoz
dealbreaker
copyblogger
shoemoney
BoingBoing
gizmodo_thumb16[1][1]
mattcutts
metafilter
43folders
weblogsinc
StevePavlina
technorati
Lifehacker
ValleyWag
guykawasaki
datlykos
wonkette
defamer
gawker
b5media
zenhabits
thesuperficial
tmz
Some of the blogs that I read look like this
emomsathome
lorelle
LizStrauss
SEO by jennifer
richminx
crooksandliars
This is the funniest result I have seen so far!
chrisgarrett
alltipsandtricks
digital-Inspiration
freshblogger
DoshDosh
dailyblogtips
boggingtips
pamilvisions
bloggrrl
Smashing magazine
and this is how my blog looks like
Fresh Perspectives

I am not sure if such studies have been done before or if its even possible to find this ratio accurately and I have no idea how Philipp Lenssen calculates it either, but it is an interesting overview.

And I wonder a few things about the results…

Why are more females not blogging?

Why are more females not reading ‘most influential’ blogs?

Did Northxeast mean most influential ‘technology’ bloggers?

If not, do you think any of these blogs would start considering blogging on topics that are of interest to females, in order to increase their readership?

I just hope more and more female bloggers start reading some of the very knowledgeable blogs out there and if more of them started blogging, I am sure they will only add to the richness of the blogosphere.

I would love to know what you think of these ratios!

Technorati Tags: community, top50

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50 comments
pearl

Mig… Im glad I made your day :) well, you and I most probably belong to the group of women who read these blogs…. and the thing is that amongst most of the women bloggers that you and I know, someone must have had some level of influence on others, so i wondered what it takes to be included amongst that top 50 list :) always good to have you here Mig… tc

laketrees

A very comprehensive list Pearl…..great research……
I will have to find some spare time to have a look at some of these blogs :)

pearl

Hey Kim.. thanks :) I’m sure you’ll find some of them quite interesting :)

pearl

I came across one of the author’s articles where he says he is counting he’s and shes but however he calculated the ratios, I found it interesting to see it this way ….

and the point is that more women need to read and blog for them to have some representation among these kinds of lists…

its interesting your readers/commenters are more women, I would’ve thought otherwise, because of range of articles you have and the number of times your posts get dugg :)

Deborah

Very interesting, Pearl. It would be helpful to know exactly how the calculations are determined. Nonetheless, I think there is some degree of accuracy in that the males dominate.

I did read this list the other day, and have ready many of them, but not all. But I don’t read them on a regular basis, as I simply don’t have the time.

An intersting note that I’ve just become aware of in thinking about this, is that I frequent blogs the most that comment on my site and have become friends with. The telling part is that majority that COMMENT regularly on my site are women! But my site has little to do with techy stuff or business, it’s more for enjoyment.

Mike Scott

To be honest, if I think about the blogs that I actually read regularly, I would have to say that they are evenly divided between male and female bloggers.

Also, I really don’t care if a blogger is male of female, but to be honest, I think that most of the better written blogs are written by women. Not all of them mind you, but women seem to put more time and effort into the writing, and tend to engage their audience better as well.

pearl

thats a nice observation you made, Mike….. I am not biased against gender of the blog writer either… I look for better, engaging style of writing and something that might resonate with me…and it doesn’t matter who writes it…

I haven’t really thought about how my blogs are divided amongst men and women writers, may be I should do that one of these days…. thanks for stopping by Mike :)

Mike Scott

No problem Pearl. I stop by just about every day, but I’ve been a little strapped for time lately, so I haven’t been quite so good at commenting,. :-(

Wendy Piersall

Hey Pearl – you flatter me… ;)

Your post really got me thinking – I’ve known ever since I started blogging that there was a pretty healthy gender gap there, and I used to let it get me down. I’ve had to make the decision to basically ignore it – and I wrote up my post about it today. Thanks for the inspiration for writing it! :)

Wendy