UCT climbs social media rankings

15 February 2019 | Story Pete van der Woude. Photo Di Caelers. Read time 2 min.
UCT has climbed 11 places in the World 100 Reputation Network’s Twitter Engagement rankings, thanks to the dedicated work of its social media team, headed by Manisha Govender.
UCT has climbed 11 places in the World 100 Reputation Network’s Twitter Engagement rankings, thanks to the dedicated work of its social media team, headed by Manisha Govender.

The World 100 Reputation Network’s Twitter Engagement report has ranked the University of Cape Town (UCT) in 57th position out of 253 universities across 35 countries globally, and first in Africa, for their social media work on Twitter.

UCT’s social media unit, based in the Communication and Marketing Department (CMD), managed a total of 1 140 tweets, compared with a global average of 464, and 520 replies (46%), compared with a global average of 9%. The team’s dedicated work pushed them ahead 11 places when compared with the previous ranking.

Gerda Kruger, the executive director of CMD, said, “We are extremely proud of the work done by the social media team, and we welcome the well-deserved recognition that this improved ranking brings. Social media is an increasingly important field of communication, particularly among the student community, and I look forward to seeing what the team can do as we grow our expertise in this area.”

The World 100 Reputation Network is the only professional network for reputation managers in the world’s best universities, exploring reputation, communications, strategy, crisis, marketing and international partnerships. Their Twitter Engagement ranking is based on the percentage of tweets retweeted, the volume of achieved retweets, the percentage of tweets favourited, and the volume of achieved favourites.

The top three universities in the ranking were Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, the Georgia Institute of Technology and Stanford University.


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Cape Town water crisis




At UCT our researchers have been analysing the causes of the current drought, monitoring water usage on campus and in the city, and looking for ways to save water while there is still time. As part of UCT’s water-saving campaign, all members of the campus community are encouraged to reduce their water use by half, which will help Cape Town to meet its water-use goals and ensure a water-sustainable university in the future.

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