IN THE PICTURE
AN ANALYSIS OF YOUR TWITTER FOLLOWERS
BRITISH EQUESTRIAN
ANALYSIS OF TWITTER FOLLOWERS
Analysing existing data - your own internal data, ratings and review sites or social media - can give powerful insight into the performance of an organisation.
In this presentation we have analysed your Twitter followers to understand your performance in attracting followers over time and trends in the number of followers you share with other sports related bodies. We have also plotted the network of accounts that are important and influential to your followers.
This information will help your marketing and social media teams to build engagement and will be of interest to all in your organisation who are keen to grow the sport.
The data in this presentation is a light touch review. It provides solid business insights in summary form. We would be pleased to put together something more detailed and bespoke for you.
PARTICIPATION RATES
Before analysing your Twitter followers it is important to look at the trends in participation rates as this will place greater context onto the analysis that follows.
Data from Sport England's Active Lives Survey shows that participation by adults at least twice in the last 28 days has stayed consistent over the last few years at around 0.6% of the population. Female regular participation is much higher than males as the graphic shows.
Less regular participation (at least once in the last year) is at 1.1% which is about half pre pandemic levels. It seems that equestrian sports have retained hard core participants but not the more casual ones.

FOLLOWERS OVER TIME
The graphic shows the number of new followers on Twitter for each year since 2009.
The chart shows that there was a huge spike in new followers in 2016 coinciding with the Olympic games in Rio at which Great Britain won two golds and a silver. There was a shorter but still significant spike for the 2012 London Olympics. The period between 2012 and 2016 could be viewed as the golden era for British Equestrian Twitter.
The sharp fall off in new followers post 2016 and lack of meaningful bounce during the Tokyo Olympics year (2021) should be a concern especially as casual participation rates are falling.

ASSOCIATED ACCOUNTS
This chart shows the number of new followers who also follow other sports related organisations.
The graphic shows that the number of new followers with shared interests in other sports followers the same pattern of spikes in 2012 and 2016 followed by a sharp decline.
Rugby, athletics and football have traditionally been sports that your followers also follow. There was a surge in followers you shared with the LTA in 2016, probably as a result of Andy Murray's gold medal for GB at the tennis.
Cross pollination with other sports is important because research shows that people who are already engaged with one sport or more likely to become engaged with another, compared with those who follow no sports. Appealing to people who follow other sports is a good way to promote participation in your sport.

NETWORK ANALYSIS
We' ve mapped who your Twitter followers also follow to produce a network analysis. A network analysis is a graphical representation of the relationships between nodes (in this case Twitter accounts) and the lines that connect them (in this case shared followers) known as edges.
Network analysis is used to understand the relationships between organisations. By graphing the connections between them we can see which accounts are the most important to people in the network. The size of the node reflects how many connections the account has. The bigger the node the more connections. The width of the edge represents the number of that account's followers that are shared with the account it connects to. The thicker the line the greater the number of shared Twitter followers. The network also identifies clusters of accounts that have things in common.
From this we can assess which types of accounts are the most influential over the network. The analysis is important because information tends to flow through the most influential accounts.
To be included in the network, the number of shared followers must represent a reasonable proportion of both yours and their total followers. This means that accounts such as Barack Obama and Gary Lineker, who have millions of followers, are not included in the network because although a lot of your followers also follow them, the number of followers you share with them is a very small proportion of their total followers. The accounts that we include in the network are, therefore, defined as the most relevant to you.
ANALYISNG THE NETWORK
Hover over an individual account to view its connections. Zoom in to show specific parts of the network. Zoom out to show the overall network. Use the 🔄 button to reset the view.
On the Community tab you will see three communities denoted by different colours.
The 1st community, in purple, is predominantly people and organisations connected with equestrian sports.
The 2nd, in the blue colour, is predominantly horseracing accounts.
The 3rd community, presented in green, consists of a combination of news accounts, politicians, Team GB, royalty and Claire Balding.
The British Equestrian is presented in red.
We also show a split in the network by gender. The equestrian community skews heavily to female, horseracing to male and the news and royalty account is more balanced.
THE KEY TAKE AWAYS
- The make up of your network shows a skew in male and female interests in equestrian and related sports. It also shows that there are accounts of common interest which could be leveraged to promote engagement with both existing and new followers. For example, Joe Lycett is popular with your network as is Claire Balding. There are marketing opportunities here.
- Currently you have around 71,500 Twitter followers. We recommend developing a social media strategy for increasing the number of new followers every year at a higher level than the existing trend.
- It would be useful to strengthen your alignment with other sports to build on a shared interest in sport with their followers, which in turn can help you grow.