You don’t need more Twitter followers

May 26, 2009 by Brad Stokes 

I’ve been thinking about this lately. I’ve come to the blinding conclusion: you really don’t need more Twitter followers.

Now before I get heckled from the stage, answer this question, “What do I use Twitter for?” If your answer is marketing, satisfying your own ego or finding your soapbox and preaching from it, feel free to ignore the rest of this post.

If your answer is:

  • Communicating with your peers and professional colleagues and others with like interests
  • Finding out what is happening in the world - both yours and the wider one
  • Establishing a Personal Learning Network within twitter
  • Dating and/or meeting new people
  • Reaching outside of your experience
  • Expanding your mind or learning

You don’t need more followers: point blank. How does having 50,000 followers help you achieve any of your goals? This comes back to knowing why your are using this tool to begin with. It’s about getting away from this strange ideal of following everyone to following the people that add value to life. The followers will come in time, but by focusing on value for you you are more likely to use Twitter effectively and more continually.

There are some distinct advantages to this approach.

Chaos be gone: Don’t be overloaded by data

I personally noticed the chaos in my TwitStream when I hit just over 250 followers, things went from useful to chaotic. I had to evolve and modify my browsing habits a little since to handle the influx of data. For a lot of people, this is just too hard and they walk away from a great tool. Aim at value for those you follow and what you see will still challenge you and surprise you. The trick is you don’t drown in a sea of information, but float in a pool of manageable proportions.

Less Spam: Be choosy about who you follow back

This is an amazing bonus. A lot of people who follow you, are interested in growing their own base of followers and a reasonable number of these are trying to sell you something. They are gurus, experts and masters of Web 2.0. Their posts can be uninspiring and irritating and completely out of your field of interest if you don’t want to “reach 15,000 followers in 23 days”. Save yourself some grief. If you are not in market or need to see 1k plus followers, follow people worth following

Intelligible intelligence: Twitter has meaning

When you have a real connection to your followers, you have a connection. When you understand those posting to you, you grow and your experience widens your world. You will derive a depth from the communication you have with others, that isn’t found in random blurts from strangers about cabbage showing on their partners teeth after lunch, unless that’s what you are interested in.

It’s okay to be a fan

There a number of very useful tools out there such as Refollow and Twitter Karma for ditching those who don’t follow you back. And when you are growing your followers (as per above) a ratio of no more than 2 following for every follower shouldn’t be ignored. These tools are fantastic, but I always find they want to delete the people I find interesting. I don’t need @moodler to follow me back, because I derive value from his insights. I’ve decided it’s okay to be a fan.

What works for you

Find what works for you and do it. If having a feed for you client base to know what is going on is what you need, have a feed for them and let them know you exist through other means. If finding people worth following is important or reaching a particular field of interest, look at http://twitterholic.com or participate in online conferences using a #hashtag stream. If you have 150 people that you follow and derive value from, follow the 150 people. Don’t get forced by hype to develop a following if it compromises your own goals or enjoyment.

Let me know what works for you I’m interested. @BradStokes and if you’re not a guru, I’ll likely follow you back for the conversation and not the number :).

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Comments

3 Responses to “You don’t need more Twitter followers”

  1. Jo Hart on May 27th, 2009 7:05 am

    Great post! I absolutely agree. I tweet for very much the 6 reasons in your bullet points above. I gain a huge amount from Twitter but already am only able to interact professionally &/or socially (rather than just check the tweets) on a regular basis with about 25% of my stream

    I have been in Twitter for about 6 months and have let my stream grow slowly (I follow 135 and am followed by 171). I like to be able to skim all tweets (from when I am offline) otherwise I risk missing interesting/useful/social nuggets such as your blog post. As my stream gets much bigger that becomes increasingly hard - particularly as a large proportion of my stream are on the other side of the world. For example I have just reached the stage where there is about an hour of tweets that don’t fit in when I start Tweetdeck - going to Web to pick them up is irritateing as I then have to do about 10 “mores” to get back that far.

    Almost all of those that I follow also follow me. I am quite “choosy” about following back - I mainly follow educators but also some others with whom I have shared interests or who just seem interesting when I check out their stream. Mostly I find new people to follow through @replies to existing members of my stream, following some of those who follow me, and through interactions at online forums etc.

    I try to check out now followers as soon as possible after they email but this doesn’t always happen. I am ruthless about those following me - corporates, marketers and self-styled social media gurus are usually blocked. I don’t like being used as a conduit into members of my stream. I also block minors where I can pick them out. This is a personal preference - I am an adult educator who also works with many adolescents who have dropped out of school and I just feel that it is not appropriate for me to have this age group in my professional and social network. If I am unsure about a follower they get benefit of doubt and I don’t block, but my key strategy is to follow only those that have interests in common although of course there are occasional exceptions.

  2. Shenelle on July 29th, 2009 9:49 pm

    Hey everyone. I’m hoping to meet new friends here so drop me a note when you
    get a chance.

    I hope to make some quality posts soon but first I have to look around the forum and
    familiarize myself with everyone and the forum.

    Bye for now. lol

    ***************************************************

    Biggest Loser of All Time

  3. darRERErign on October 15th, 2009 1:57 pm

    Hello, it really interesting, thanks

Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!





Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks