
#Tumblr active users professional#
12% people said that they used Tumblr to build their professional network and another 12% used it to stay in touch with their loved ones.17% of the usage was due to news involvement, and 15% usage attributed to brand affiliation and companies.60% of the users mentioned entertainment as their primary purpose to use Tumblr.The interview was across a period of July-September 2019. Tumblr had its due credit for the popularity and the use of GIFs by Oxford dictionary after GIF had made their way on the internet through Tumblr.Ģ100 people aged 15 years and more were interviewed in the USA to understand their primary purpose for using Tumblr.Every day 22.2 million posts had made on Tumblr.The same data for Instagram is 875 photos for Skype, it is 3,425 calls, and for Twitter is 8,237 tweets. Every second, 1,427 Tumblr posts get published.com ranks in the 51 st position for the top-visited websites in the world.Tumblr users visit roughly 67 pages monthly on the microblogging platform.Tumblr is available in 18 languages globally.While Tumblr had 391 million accounts in 2018, by October, this number rose to 441.4 million blogging accounts on the platform.However, by 2019, this has increased to more than 60 companies and includes the likes of Starbucks, Nestle, Spotify, Pepsi, etc. In 2013, Tumblr had only 30 companies advertise on its platform.Tumblr released its app for Google Glass in May 2013, but the project failed miserably, costing massive investment to the company.Adidas launched its soccer blog on Tumblr after the announcement mentioned above in June 2012.

Tumblr began offering paid advertisements on its platform in April 2012.In 2011, for the first time, any social networking platform hosted the official blog of President Barack Obama, and that was Tumblr.The number rose to an astonishing 165.5 billion posts in October 2018. In May 2011, Tumblr had just 5 billion posts on its platform.In August 2010, Tumblr was one of the top 125 tech companies based out of New York by Lead 411.
