45 votes

Demographics Survey Results, Year 0.5

Intro

Hello everyone.

Due to @Kat’s ever-failing health, I will be analyzing the data instead of her this time around. If you have no idea what this is about, see the demographic survey that was posted on the day of Tildes’ half-year birthday. She’s done this before, so let’s see what's new.

The original survey was answered by 404 people, while the half year survey was answered by 293. Though the total number of replies was lower, the completion rate was actually higher: 293 responses from 422 unique visitors, or 69.4%, up from the first year’s 404/599=67.4%. The decrease in answers is most likely attributed to the change of the default sort from “Activity, all time” to “Activity, 3 days”: the response rate held fairly consistent for the first three days, then plummeted after the third as the topic stopped being able to gain any publicity. Though response rates on the original were not high after the first three days, there was a steady trickle up until the survey stopped accepting responses.

While the numbers are relatively big (for a community of this size), do take anything found with a healthy dose of scepticism. Even though the original dataset she shared with me does not contain any identifiable information (all I can see are randomly-generated user strings) the specifics of that data will not be posted, as was mentioned during the original survey. This is because I am unable to be certain I can sufficiently anonymize it. Typeform has created a summary of the data on a per-question basis with substantially more datapoints than this thread, which you can find https://themeerkat.typeform.com/report/H2TtYg/rVf75AqbKaPncy6y.

Explanation

I will compare the statistics with a similarish reference set based on the six most common territories, all of which are above one percentage of the survey answers. That means when I compare on the general populace, I will base it on numbers from USA, Canada, UK, Australia, the Netherlands, and France.

This means it will be weighted like this:

USA CAN UK AUS NL FR
55 22 20 10 8 6
45.45% 18.18% 16.53% 8.26% 6.61% 4.96%

I’ll clean up my data sheet and post it in the comments later. You all are absolutely encouraged to fix it because it will most likely contain errors.

The interesting stuff

What has changed in the first half year?

Age

This time around an age range was used instead of an exact numerical input, but if we were to assume that everyone is aged in the middle of their age range (so 20 for 18-22 year olds, for instance), the average age of a user would be 26.84 years, or 26 years, 9 months, and 4 days old (roughly). So we’ve grown a bit younger than last year, on average.

Gender and identity

Gender distribution seems to be roughly the same. We see a small decrease in percentage of heterosexuals, divided roughly evenly on the remaining categories. We also see a significant increase in the amount of transgender users, but since the amount reported is small, that could also just be statistical noise. The percentage of polyamorous people has remained exactly the same. For pronouns, there are only three users who prefer it/its, and zero who prefer any neopronoun set: every “Other” was offering commentary on the question rather than answering it. Similarly, almost all of the “Others” for orientation were expressing that they didn’t understand the specifics of the options given.

All in all, little has changed.

Territorial

In both surveys, three options dominated: the USA, the UK, and Canada. On that end, little has changed, though it seems that all of the Swedes disappeared, with zero answering the half year survey as compared to eight for the first one. Wonder what they’ve been busy with.

Native language

Unsurprisingly, about everyone speaks English. What is more surprising is the lack of native multilinguals: fewer than 6% of Americans who natively speak English also natively speak a second language. For comparison, that’s 10% for Australians, 21% for Canadians, and 13% for the UK. This represents an overall decrease in geographic diversity, with users coming from 36 different countries as compared to 42 the first time.

Religion

Compared to the world at-large, we sure are a god-denying folk. A whopping 52% of us consider ourselves atheists, whereas the sample data puts it at 12.1%, so we’re far from the norm of our fellow citizens.

We got a few interesting answers in the “other” section of the religion part of the survey. We got a few interesting ones I had never heard of before, like “Discordian”. But generally speaking, around half of them were either “none” or one of the actual options. Two stood out to me though.

To the one Chinese user who filled it in as “The heck is chinese traditional”: I have no idea either.

To the one Australian user who wrote “Left-hand path Heathen”, you be yourself, mate.

Politics

The average has barely moved in the last half year—we’re still slanted very much to the left. Unlike the first survey, there was no freeform input this time around, so the specifics are hard to discuss.

Computers

We have seen a drastic fall in the percentage of Windows users. It was at 60%, and is down to 43%. Nearly all of this has gone to Linux, which is now at 38%. That’s quite large, especially compared to the reference data, which has Linux use among web users at 1.23%. It’s like a herd of penguins in here.

Mobile phones

Compared to half a year ago, not many of us have switched mobile OS. Compared to the calculated data, we like Android slightly more than average. 62% vs 72%.

Not much interesting in the “other” section, though I will give a salute to the one American user still holding out on Windows 10 Mobile.

Work

We have a pretty even distribution with three exceptions. “Computer software”, “Never employed”, and “IT”. Nearly 3/4 who answered “Never employed” are currently students.

Among the students, we only have one student that proudly smokes and has no interest in quitting. The campaigns seem to be working.

Tildes usage

If we look at the users who visit Tildes multiple times per day, we see a few interesting trends. Nearly all of them use Android, and nearly all of them are employed. Beyond that it all seems surprisingly… average.

Overall, people rated Tildes as a platform as-it-stands a 5.7/7 (0.81), and their optimism for the future of the site at a 5.4/7 (0.77). The most important reason they use the site (of the options given) is “Minimal, fast design” at a 4.6/5 (0.92), with “Privacy-consciousness and lack of trackers” right on its heels. 20.8% of users have ever contributed money to Tildes (surprisingly high, compared to most donation campaigns), with about half as many making a recurring donation.

Despite @Kat’s insidious attempt to influence the data, “waves” as a demonym only received 5.5% of the vote. The leader for that, overwhelmingly, is “no demonym at all”, with a combined 49% of the votes and 18.5% of respondents strongly preferring the site not to have a demonym. Second place, the generic “users”, only has 15.8% in comparison. The first Tildes-specific demonym present is Tilders/~​rs, with 13.4%.

Most notably, about ⅔ of users would prefer Tildes to be remain invite-only long-term.

Freeform questions

The survey had three freeform questions: “What do you like most about Tildes, thus far?”, “What do you like least about Tildes, thus far?”, and “What is the most pressing missing feature/‘pain point’ for you about Tildes in its current state?” All the comments fill over 30 pages, so it seems like we really have a lot to say. You can download and look at all of the raw answers here, if you’d like. They’ve been shuffled to ensure privacy.

Likes

A large majority of the comments boil down to “a quality of discussion where disagreement is discussed in a respectful and level-headed way”. A very significant amount also point out the lack of “low effort content and trolls” as a good thing. A significant amount also mention the simple and quick-loading interface. We also have one user who believes he can find a twerk team on Tildes.

So on this, @Deimos can feel proud for what he has done. Though you know what really makes the site good? There is one comment that properly gets it: “The people, d’awwww.”. Yes, that includes you.

Dislikes

But not everything is perfect, though negatives about Tildes seem to be a lot less unanimous than the positives. There are a few that repeat a bit more often than others: the biggest one is “left centrism in discussions” or “echo chambers”, though in a close second, as with any political discussion, is its exact opposite with complaints about “too much discussion about left-centrism in discussions”—notably, though, in the question “Do you feel as though Tildes has a good mix of political opinions, for your personal preferences?”, the leading answer was “Yes” with 63%. A small amount of users also think we have too many software developers.

Beyond that, the main complaint that stands out is “lack of users and content”, which I am sure will improve in time.

Missing feature/pain point

This too is very varied. A lot of the comments are actually about features that have been introduced since the survey was done, like bookmarking. Honestly, it’s not that many complaints compared to just likes and dislikes.

The “majority” seem to be on a lack of tag autocompletion, USA-centrism, and the lack of a mobile app.

There was one more section: “If you would like to offer any long-form commentary, criticism, or feedback regarding Tildes, you may do so here.” Due to its nature, I’ll let you read through them yourself in the raw data, if you’re interested.

Closing words

First of all, to everyone who took the time to answer: thank you! I hope this post and the survey has brought some fun to everyone. If there’s an interest, I am sure that Kat, myself, or someone else will make another one at the one year anniversary. We already got some feedback in the previous thread, but we’re always open for more.

I will do some additional data comparisons on request. I might be a bit occupied this weekend, though, so that will come when it comes.

13 comments

  1. [7]
    Comment deleted by author
    Link
    1. [4]
      Comment deleted by author
      Link Parent
      1. Emerald_Knight
        (edited )
        Link Parent
        You two are giving me diabetes. Edit: Whoever gave me the Exemplary label with the reason "<3", you're beautiful and I hope you have good things happen to you :)
        • Exemplary

        You two are giving me diabetes.


        Edit: Whoever gave me the Exemplary label with the reason "<3", you're beautiful and I hope you have good things happen to you :)

        9 votes
      2. [2]
        nic
        Link Parent
        Nope. Aint happening. Nuh uh.

        Tilderino

        Nope. Aint happening. Nuh uh.

        8 votes
    2. AnthonyB
      Link Parent
      Don't sell yourself short. You and a handful of other very active users have had a profound impact on the quality of discussion on this site by setting a great example for everyone else. It's nice...

      It’s a privilege to be here so early in the site’s history and help play a minuscule part in it.

      Don't sell yourself short. You and a handful of other very active users have had a profound impact on the quality of discussion on this site by setting a great example for everyone else. It's nice to see your name pop up again since I haven't seen you around in a while. I wish you the best with your health and hope to see you back around here more often.

      8 votes
    3. ducks
      Link Parent
      Kat, it was honestly no problem. You've had enough hardships in life, you deserve a break. I obviously hope you pull trough, and get to do the one year survey too. But if not, then I will take...

      Kat, it was honestly no problem. You've had enough hardships in life, you deserve a break.

      I obviously hope you pull trough, and get to do the one year survey too. But if not, then I will take care of it with great delay.

      7 votes
    4. Emerald_Knight
      Link Parent
      I'd never even seen that post about your health. Despite all of the pain you must be going through, you've been a pretty awesome member of this community. I hope that things get better for you....

      I'd never even seen that post about your health. Despite all of the pain you must be going through, you've been a pretty awesome member of this community. I hope that things get better for you. Kick this illness in the dick, or whatever alternative genitalia you prefer, and stick around so you can keep pestering us about the demographics keep being our official unofficial demographer! :)

      7 votes
  2. clerical_terrors
    Link
    IIRC this was partially due to there not being an option of "previously employed, currently a student". In general the Student and employed categories seemed to be more separated than necessary. I...
    • Exemplary

    We have a pretty even distribution with three exceptions. “Computer software”, “Never employed”, and “IT”. Nearly 3/4 who answered “Never employed” are currently students.

    IIRC this was partially due to there not being an option of "previously employed, currently a student". In general the Student and employed categories seemed to be more separated than necessary.

    Unsurprisingly, about everyone speaks English. What is more surprising is the lack of native multilinguals: fewer than 6% of Americans who natively speak English also natively speak a second language. For comparison, that’s 10% for Australians, 21% for Canadians, and 13% for the UK. This represents an overall decrease in geographic diversity, with users coming from 36 different countries as compared to 42 the first time.

    I think we shouldn't underestimate how off-putting clearly English-favored design/content can be, even if it's unintentional. Nobody would argue US politics don't have an effect on the world at large but when it's implicitly taken for granted that North America is the center of the universe, and that all that happens there is relevant and interesting, while the response to people offering to talk about the daily goings-on in other countries is tepid at best it creates a rather unsatisfying power dynamic.

    19 votes
  3. ducks
    Link
    Also while I am at it, a big thank you to @Kat for making the original and half year survey. Without her starting this, we'd have nothing.

    Also while I am at it, a big thank you to @Kat for making the original and half year survey. Without her starting this, we'd have nothing.

    15 votes
  4. Kind_of_Ben
    Link
    Wait, some people actually do use "it/its" as their pronouns? I assumed no one would ever use those and always go for "they/them" if they didn't use something like "ze". Interesting.

    Wait, some people actually do use "it/its" as their pronouns? I assumed no one would ever use those and always go for "they/them" if they didn't use something like "ze". Interesting.

    1 vote
  5. [4]
    Kuromantis
    Link
    it's been a year and no surveys :/

    First of all, to everyone who took the time to answer: thank you! I hope this post and the survey has brought some fun to everyone. If there’s an interest, I am sure that Kat, myself, or someone else will make another one at the one year anniversary.

    it's been a year and no surveys :/

    1. [3]
      ducks
      Link Parent
      I left this forum for reasons. Didn't feel like making a survey for a place I am no longer an active user. You're always free to fire up a survey of your own. I am not affiliated with Tildes in...

      I left this forum for reasons. Didn't feel like making a survey for a place I am no longer an active user.

      You're always free to fire up a survey of your own. I am not affiliated with Tildes in any way or shape beyond having an user here. You are equally qualified as me.

      3 votes
      1. [2]
        Kuromantis
        Link Parent
        Don't worry, I asked people if they wanted to do it and, liking objective data we did want a census. Eventually we made one and these were the results.

        Don't worry, I asked people if they wanted to do it and, liking objective data we did want a census. Eventually we made one and these were the results.

        2 votes
        1. ducks
          Link Parent
          Didn't know that. Well, good someone else stood up.

          Didn't know that. Well, good someone else stood up.

          1 vote