Here are unique visits by top 50 country to my Blogspot blog (i.e., not including my archive) over the last or month or so. Not surprisingly, the top 4 countries are English-speaking, but then we get to Germany, Sweden, Finland, and India. I make a lot of jokes about all my loyal Finnish readers, but the Swedes are always neck and neck with the Finns in terms of per capita readership. My real weakness is Denmark.
Unique Visits | ||
1 | United States | 231737 |
2 | Canada | 17942 |
3 | United Kingdom | 9521 |
4 | Australia | 6259 |
5 | Germany | 3389 |
6 | (not set) | 3374 |
7 | Sweden | 2774 |
8 | Finland | 2033 |
9 | India | 1905 |
10 | Ireland | 1762 |
11 | New Zealand | 1577 |
12 | Norway | 1374 |
13 | Brazil | 1271 |
14 | Netherlands | 1203 |
15 | Poland | 1028 |
16 | France | 984 |
17 | Czech Republic | 926 |
18 | Israel | 910 |
19 | Japan | 903 |
20 | Switzerland | 899 |
21 | South Korea | 880 |
22 | Hong Kong | 810 |
23 | South Africa | 708 |
24 | Spain | 701 |
25 | Singapore | 592 |
26 | Italy | 570 |
27 | Denmark | 547 |
28 | Thailand | 516 |
29 | Portugal | 515 |
30 | Philippines | 484 |
31 | Turkey | 464 |
32 | Mexico | 451 |
33 | Greece | 394 |
34 | Hungary | 390 |
35 | Belgium | 349 |
36 | Austria | 315 |
37 | Costa Rica | 315 |
38 | Malaysia | 312 |
39 | Romania | 281 |
40 | Russia | 267 |
41 | Vietnam | 257 |
42 | Taiwan | 254 |
43 | Croatia | 251 |
44 | Chile | 222 |
45 | Bulgaria | 191 |
46 | United Arab Emirates | 188 |
47 | Argentina | 186 |
48 | Colombia | 170 |
49 | Serbia | 170 |
50 | Lithuania | 155 |
By the way, Google now offers a Fusion Table feature to combine your data on a spreadsheet with public data. I told it to fuse my data on site visits with population by country figures from the CIA World Factbook, so I could get per capita figures. Instead, it just pasted in data in rank order so that the row with my U.S. visits now has China's population next to it, my Canada visits are now next to India's population, and so forth.
Is there something I don't get about this feature?
Poland's relatively high ranking is interesting.
ReplyDeleteThe other high-ranking countries are either English-speaking, or very big countries, or countries where a lot of people are online (Brazil), or a combination.
Perhaps Scandinavians spend more time online during the winter, boosting totals for this month.
With Poland, who knows. Are there any Polish people here who could speculate on why this blog is particularly popular in Poland?
Risto
I take that back. Poland has a lot more people than I thought it did. For some reason, I thought it would only have about 20 million people. I should have checked before I posted.
ReplyDeleteRisto
Denmark's media is supposedly less PC than in Sweden, Norway, and Finland so perhaps the curious people there have less of a need to find alternative sources of information.
ReplyDeleteDo you get regional breakdowns - New England v The South, NYC v Chicago, Northern Ireland v Scotland?
Considering Australia is one-third the UK's population, and comparatively isolated from the problems discussed on this blog, that's some major punching above weight.
ReplyDelete"Perhaps Scandinavians spend more time online during the winter, boosting totals for this month."
ReplyDeleteA very large percentage of Scandinavians, Dutch and a fairly large percentage of Germans have really good English. I bet that explains most of it. Italy and Spain are way down the list, probably to some extent because English isn't as widely known there as in Germanic Europe. I'm surprised that Brazil (1271) beat Mexico (451) and Argentina (186) by so much. I don't have an explanation for that one.
Steve, a lot of your readers are nerds who like statistics and graphs. I'm sure you have more insights about your readership trends and demographics. We'll eat it all up.
And 3 guys from Freedonia!Hail Hail Freedonia /Land of the Free and Free!
ReplyDeleteGreat blog, Steve, the first site I visit every day.
ReplyDeleteBtw. I found it via Ross Douthat's old The Atlantic blog, some of his readers were denouncing him in the comments for mentioning that horrible racist Steve Sailer so I had to check that guy out. I am really glad I did.
I must say I am quite proud of my country (only 10 million people) for such a respectable showing in the iSteve-readership-by-country ranking (suck it, Spain and Italy!).
- a long time Czech reader
http://www.browndailyherald.com/poll-majority-support-race-blind-faculty-hires-1.2801884#.UMpyveTWKEE
ReplyDeletePoll: Majority support race-blind faculty hires
All those entries about how much better life becomes the nearer one lives to the Canadian border have paid off.
ReplyDeleteWhereas Evelyn Waugh means nothing to the contemporary British.
On a per capita basis, Ireland is beating out the UK pretty easily.
ReplyDelete"I'm sure you have more insights about your readership trends and demographics. We'll eat it all up."
ReplyDeleteSo true; this post combines your readers' passion for data with a universal narcissistic desire to talk about ourselves. A potent brew.
On the comparison tip(do they still say that anymore?)interesting that the UK is about 60,000,000 souls, and Ireland is about 4,500,000.About a 12:1 ratio.Yet the isteve ratio is closer to 5:1. Cool.
ReplyDeleteOne of those 880 unique views from South Korea was mine---I visited iSteve last week from a computer I've never used before.
ReplyDeleteHoozah!
Greetings from South Korea!
ReplyDelete880 visits... so it's not just me. Any fellow Seoul Sailerites want to get together a few beers in Itaewon?
I'll round up some heavies to keep out Antifa and direct you to the secret location.
I'm too lazy to do it, but somebody should calculate the country order after adjusting for population and see what the order is then.
ReplyDeleteThat's pretty good traffic for a thoughtcriminal site. If you could get a dollar a month from even a quarter of just the US visitors...
ReplyDeleteI promise I'll donate when I have a full time job.
I find it pretty interesting how many hits are coming from Hong Kong, South Korea, and Japan. I'd guess that these are mostly white expats, so Steve seems to be doing pretty well on a per capita basis in those populations.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of Indians and Swedes, an Indian tweeted this post yesterday about Swedish migrant workers doing menial jobs in oil-rich Norway. If you hit the "connect" button on Twitter next time your signed in, Steve, you'll see I copied you on it when I retweeted it.
ReplyDeleteIn general, Twitter can be a good source of material you wouldn't have seen elsewhere. You ought to consider using it for that, in addition to tweeting links to your blog posts.
Any state-level data?
ReplyDeleteDon't know much about Finns but they strike as the kind that would enjoy shows like "Pinky and the Brain".
ReplyDeleteISteve has a lot of that kind of humour to it. Delivered in complete earnestness, apparently.
Reality is much more fun than a cartoon, of course.
Steve you need to ask yourself "what can I do to attract greater interest from our new Mexican overlords ?". Perhaps a sabado gigante edition of isteve?
ReplyDeleteOver a quarter of a million readers in one month. That's a lot of readers. Considering that no one else covers your beat, it stands to reason that you are one of the most influential voices in America.
ReplyDeleteActually WASPs hate talking about themselves. Part of the reason Steve's Obama's a wasp routine is silly. Please don't project your nerd narcissism on the world.
ReplyDeleteI won't do the whole list, but here is Steve page views per 100,000 population for selected countries:
ReplyDeleteUS: 74
Canada: 51
Finland: 38
Ireland: 38
Sweden: 29
Norway: 27
Australia: 27
UK: 15
Israel: 11
Switzerland: 11
Denmark: 10
Germany: 4
Austria: 4
Mexico: 0.4
India: 0.2
Steve is as popular, or much more popular, in Israel as in Switzerland, Germany, and Austria. Make of that what you will.
Look at Finland -- 38
DeleteGood English, more time indoors during cold months for Internet, has a strong anti-communist streak due to winter war, civil war, etc . . . Like to read about how smart they are
Risto
(not set)? Is that like President Not Sure?
ReplyDeleteThere is a simple reason why so many hits come from East Asia. Westerners living there (I lived in Japan for five years) can see with their own eyes that PC is rubbish. The locals neither know nor care what PCers have to say. If you explain PC to them, they look incredulous. To them, the preservation of their culture and racial identity is a self-evidently worthy goal. The Japanese and Koreans won't stop going on about how great it is to be homogeneous.
ReplyDeleteMore interesting would be a breakdown of the SES background of iSteve readers.
ReplyDeleteI first found out about this blog from a theoretical physicist professor.
"I won't do the whole list, but here is Steve page views per 100,000 population for selected countries"
ReplyDeleteIt's important to understand that we're not dealing with the number of people who visited this site per month. Sitemeter displays, among other things, the number of unique visitors per day. That number times 30 is NOT the number of unique visitors per month because some visitors visit almost every day. Worldwide iSteve is read by about 10,000 people per day. The number of unique US visitors per day per 100,000 population is more like 2.5.
Some of those non-US, especially European, visits could be from professional site monitors and government types trying to keep an eye on so-called "hate" sites.
ReplyDeleteI first discovered iSteve through National Review. Those were the days.
ReplyDeleteThe Not Sures are all easily identified. They talk like fags.
ReplyDeleteI'm one of your readers based in South Africa (708 views), though I am an Englishman, who was born in India of English expat parents.
ReplyDeleteI use FeedDemon RSS reader to pick up on your posts, depending on how the algorithm works, I may generate 2 page views for each article.
You post, I would guess, about 90 posts a month. So, as an avid reader of all your posts, I may generate perhaps 180 views. I alone could be generating a quarter of your South African page-views.
It's a pity it's difficult for you to monetarise more gainfully, that your subject matter and handling of it is seen as too toxic for the MSM.
Nick
I think this blog is of much interest to people who live outside their home country ( ie expats ) who invariably have ample opportunity to cogitate over human similarities and differences in terms of various human groupings
ReplyDeleteI'm an Australian who resides in Thailand - I doubt many Thais have much interest in the themes covered in this blog
NZ is 6th at 28.
ReplyDeleteJust saying.
Population is now 4,444,444 as of last week.
Goodly proportion of realist Elves and Shire Hobbits.
Braziiiiil!!!
ReplyDeleteMany of the Asian visits could be from expats, those kinds of people tend to have independent views more often, per capita. I am from Poland but I visit this site from Hong Kong (previously from Korea).
ReplyDeleteWorldwide iSteve is read by about 10,000 people per day.
ReplyDeleteHow did you calculate that?
Compete.com puts isteve.blogspot.com at about 10,000 (sometimes lower, sometimes higher) unique visitors per month, but its notorious for undercounting less-visited sites.
According to his own stats, Sailer gets over 250,000 unique visits per month. For all you know it could be the same 250,000 people reading each day. If 10,000 people read it per day they would have to be a different 10,000 each day. That doesn't seem likely.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6xKT9rq-i8
ReplyDeleteCinderellisha.
Ewww.
Comments are hilarious though.
I see Steve is not popular in Sub Saharian Africa.
ReplyDeleteI'm another of those expat readers. Living in a non-white country makes you realize that the problems of the world are not caused by evil white heterosexual gentile men, and ergo the dominant socio-cultural narrative in our home countries is complete nonsense. Its also human nature to notice differences rather than similarities, and hence realize there are real differences between population groups. Its nice to find a site with other readers and commentators who also realize that.
ReplyDeletehttp://youtu.be/H03kStyYSmo
ReplyDeletehere at isteve, we're a multicultural community! diversity rulz!!
ReplyDeleteSeoul Sailerite here... where is the clubhouse in Itaewon?
ReplyDeleteYour British readership is likely to grow. Ed West, the DT opinion piece writer, has just posted another link to you blog. More free advertising.
ReplyDeleteMakes me think we should be having meet-ups, no doubt monitored by the forces of state oppression.
ReplyDeleteIm in the UK btw.
"According to his own stats, Sailer gets over 250,000 unique visits per month. For all you know it could be the same 250,000 people reading each day. If 10,000 people read it per day they would have to be a different 10,000 each day. That doesn't seem likely."
ReplyDeleteThe 250k per month stat is misleading. Sitemeter just multiplies its unique-visitors-per-day number by 30 to get it. That's the wrong way to do it. How do I know this? I have a blog of my own with Sitemeter on it. The unique-visitors-per-day stat seems meaningful to me. iSteve gets about 10k of those. How many truly unique visitors does Steve get per month? It must be above 10k, it could even be 20k. Anything much above that wouldn't make sense.
Over 10% of the visits from Argentina are by me, I doubt more than 10 people followe you here.
ReplyDeleteHi Steve, one of your Irish readers here.
ReplyDeleteWhat I find most interesting is the large over representation of Irish visits to UK visits on a per capita basis. Frankly, I would have imagined it would have been the other way around (the UK is further down the PC road). Does anybody have any theories to why this disparity exists?
Could it be due to Ireland's younger population?
Higher third level participation rate?
Possibly there is less Irish specific web content so Irish users are more inclined to search out international sources?
Maybe a factor is the higher % of Irish residents being white 95% v about 87~88% for the UK as a whole?
What?! An iSteve meetup in Seoul, South Korea? Unfortunately I don't live near the capitol.
ReplyDeleteHere's a little homegrown talent I found blogging from Korea: http://viakorea.wordpress.com/
He's a definite iSteve-style thoughtcrimer the way he notices stuff.
I'm one of those 'unique' visitors from India. I guess Steve is popular among Indians because a lot of Indians are interested in HBD issues, and also tend to be conservative. Although most of the stuff that Steve writes about may not affect them directly, Steve has often written about Indians, especially regarding caste and intelligence.
ReplyDeleteI'm not surprised that the UAE is the only Middle-Eastern country in that list (not counting Israel), as Steve's blog is probably banned in all the others. UAE is a more liberal version of the Middle-East, but when I went to Dubai about five years ago, I found that I could not access quite a few of my favorite blogs due to their 'Unislamic' content, and I wasn't surfing for porn.
ReplyDelete"With Poland, who knows. Are there any Polish people here who could speculate on why this blog is particularly popular in Poland?"
ReplyDeleteI'm a Pole living in the US, and though 1028 unique visits is a small number relative to the total unique visits, it is quite surprising that many Poles read Isteve.
It would be interesting to see where in Poland these visits are coming from but, my best guess would be from the urban/city centers and academic institutions.
Steve doesn't do much "internet marketing" of his blog, I am not aware of any SEM, and at best his topics may attract some SEO traffic but, other than word of mouth, links through complementary blog comments, reposting of Steve's topics on other blogs, VDare, and Takimag. Its not easy to find this blog, its literally hidden on the internet. If he even did a miniscule marketing campaign, as a single writer he could probably rival some of the top newspaper columns and magazines.
I only discovered Steve's blog after listening to a lecture he gave at a conference a few years ago, it shows how much readership potential this blog has. Probably would have never found it otherwise.
I guess reading ISteve is a Polish Past time.
Cought my Finnish eye, the Finns & Swedes etc in the title.
ReplyDeleteSurprising popularity on behalf the Finns. It can be due to the rising awareness of problems of multiculturalism in Finland during last few years. In April 2011 the Perussuomalaiset ("True Finns") political party got a landslide victory in parlamentary election, rising their vote from 2% to 18%, in 4 years.
That´s one sign of the same thing here in Finland.
Not only the cold winter.
"here at isteve, we're a multicultural community! diversity rulz!!"
ReplyDeleteYeah! Diversity is strength! Diversity is strength!
Do you have an estimate of the average age of your readers?Female readership?
ReplyDeleteStill no readers in Burkina Faso?
ReplyDeleteSeoul Sailerites:
ReplyDeleteProbably rude to negotiate too much on a public forum, so I'll just put this out there.
Meet you on Korean Election Day, early evening 'til late, at Three Alley Pub in Itaewon. I'm a youngish fellow -- think we'll eventually figure out who we are.
Be there or be square!
The 910 readers in Israel must think that iSteve is good for the Jews!
ReplyDeleteHmmm... Singapore's got quite a number of unique visitors.
ReplyDeleteI try to post links to Steve's articles on local alternative media like The Online Citizen and Temasek Review Emeritus in order to expose more locals to the arguments used here, which are all too applicable to our own circumstances.
Dunno how successful it has been though.
I like to come here because I want to learn more about the latest lunacy that your elites are foisting upon your people so that I can be better prepared when it inevitably arrives in my country.
ReplyDeleteAnd I also find Steve very witty. That makes digesting the bad news much easier.
Best wishes from Brazil
@Korean commenter above
ReplyDeletedo Korean righties really get harassed by antifa, as they do over here in Germany, or were you joking?
“Noah172 said…
ReplyDeleteSteve is as popular, or much more popular, in Israel as in Switzerland, Germany, and Austria. Make of that what you will.”
I can’t really speak for Israelis, but as a half-Jew let me offer a semi-insider’s perspective of Sailer’s appeal to a subset of my tribe. Steve’s work is attractive to anyone with an appreciation for the truth, but beyond the standard informational reasons for reading Isteve, here are some psychological reasons for readership that are unrelated to the value of the knowledge available on the site.
Reason 1 - Humor: Udolpho once mentioned in an old thread that Jews seem to get along well with other ethnocentric groups like the blacks and the Irish. I have a simpler explanation. Despite being an HBD aware conservative, I like them socially for the same reason I read Steve: WE LIKE FUNNY SHIT TALKERS. I initially came to this site to read up on the man who unmasked Asia Times’ Spengler, but Steve’s cutting humor and good natured cynicism has kept me visiting daily ever since. Steve is like a calmer, more erudite version of the black guy who blurts out what everyone else thinks but doesn’t want to say. He’s like Katt Williams with a spreadsheet.
Reason 2 - Elitism: We like to fancy ourselves sophisticates who know how the world really works, unlike the great unwashed. Being an Isteve reader does wonders for one’s self-perception as a member of the intellectual elect.
Reason 3 - Contrarianism: In an old Clint Eastwood flick, he asks a refusenik “ Why is it that you Jews are always fighting city hall?” The short answer, as Steve knows, is that dissatisfaction seems to be part of our national(ethnic) character. Steve’s snarky defiance resonates with some of us.
Reason 4 - Shiksappeal
Your above average interest in Canada attracts a lot of Canadians - including myself. It would be interesting to see a Provincial breakdown.
ReplyDeleteHBD is alive and well in Finland. I've turned on a buddy to this site back in the Motherland.
ReplyDeleteHello from Ireland. Considering that there's 70 million in the UK compared with 4.5 million in Ire yet the ratio of hits is only 8:1 in comparison your quite popular with us.
ReplyDeleteI discovered Steve years ago when as an unsophisticated teenager I was drawn to American conservatism out of a reaction to our domestic leftists insufferable loathing of Bush. Out of a desire to learn more about the American national review style right I typed something like american conservative into Google. The first thing that came up was "The American Conservative" magazine and I discovered Steve and the rest of the dissident right from there.
ReplyDeleteI really am surprised by how popular Steve is in Ireland. I am politically active both intellectually and in a political party, and to be frank, the only type of resistance I have encountered to liberalism is of the uncouth Alf Garnett type. I have never encountered alt-right opinions or attitudes among the intelligentsia in Ireland, we've pretty much accepted it as de rigour, liberal attitudes towards HBD, myself, atleast publicly included. There isn't even a BNP type fringe, head-banger element. I haven't been so pleasantly surprised in a while.