MarketingVOX: As the hype surrounding the three-year-old virtual world generates news story after news story and attracts big business, the number of “residents” actually logging on may be much fewer than everyone thinks – and to investors and advertisers, numbers matter, writes CNET.
As of Wednesday, Linden Lab reported that there were 2,325,015 “residents” of Second Life. The company defines each of those as representing “a uniquely named avatar with the right to log in to Second Life, trade currency and visit the community pages.”
Yet most of those residents try it once… never to return. And some players have more than one avatar – up to five – each of which counts as a resident.
The real number of active, individual users who log in regularly is more likely 200,000 to 230,000, according to internal metrics used by Linden Lab and calculations by others in the industry.
Related stories:
- Digitas VP: Second Life Ain’t All That – Yet
- iVillage Launches Girls’ Nights out in Second Life
- Scion Launches Broadband Site, Joins Second Life
- Marketers’ Tour of Second Life Planned
- Darfur Genocide Photo Exhibit in Second Life
- ‘Second Life Liberation Army’ Targets Brands
- Music Labels Smell Money in Second Life
- Uncle Sam May Target Online Virtual Assets
- First Virtual-World Millionaire, in Real-World Dollars
- Agency: Second Life to Revolutionize Media, Be Cheap
- Second Life Spawns Real Virtual Agencies
- Second Life Under Attack… Again
- Second Life Facing Real Problems from Virtual Thieves
- Dell Unveils V-Business Strategy in Second Life
- IBM Relies on Second Life for ‘V-Business’
- Second Life Natives Restless, Ruminate Rebellion
- Hitwise: Second Life Traffic Soars
- Pontiac Wants to Create Car Culture in Second Life
- Marketers Begin to Get Second Life
- Reuters to File Reports from Second Life
- Burnett Sets up Shop in Second Life
- Real-World Security Breach at Second Life

Excellent links to some of the hype. Sometimes numbers do matter
Looks like a good example of what a community might do when an organization inflates indicators.