Digital Future Dell

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Top 10 Reasons I Will Not Follow You in Return on Twitter

Posted on 6:03 PM by Unknown
Here's a fantastic article that deals with that tricky Twitter question - should I reciprocate and follow you, if you're following me? Atherton Bartelby clearly gets it right in his "Top 10 Reasons I Will Not Follow You in Return on Twitter" posting. It's good reading!

FOLLOW FAIL: The Top 10 Reasons I Will Not Follow You in Return on Twitter
January 6, 2009 - 4:08 pm PDT - by Atherton Bartelby, Mashable.com
Atherton Bartelby is a Brooklyn-based graphic designer, art director, writer, blogger, and photographer. He authors a blog at Curious Affairs.

We’ve all been there: You’re at a party hosted by that one fabulous friend, and populated with the best of your mutual circle of friends. The atmosphere is almost carbonated with excitement; the guests’ personalities flawlessly compliment each other; and the conversations that abound are infused with intelligence, caustic wit, and a wide variety of knowledge that ensures the complete absence of any pregnant, awkward pauses. Then, it happens: someone appears who just doesn’t…fit.

A similar phenom happens on Twitter. You’re having conversations with your established Twitter friends, you’re broadcasting useful information, news, or links to your followers, and you’re “engaging your Tribe,” etc., when suddenly, someone begins following you who, much like that previously referenced party guest, just doesn’t fit. This is the person whose follow on Twitter you simply cannot bring yourself to return. This is the follow fail.

Run any number of searches on Google or Alexa and you will arrive at a veritable host of articles offering endless lists of tips on “how to get more followers on Twitter.” What you will not find are lists compiled by Twitter “power users” regarding the major reasons why they will or will not return a Twitter follower’s follow when it happens, and this is my gift to you: “The Top Ten Reasons Why *I* Will Not Follow You In Return On Twitter.”


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. You have no user avatar

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

…or your user avatar is neither a personalized photograph nor reflective of a brand.

More important than whether or not your Twitter profile background is “designed” is how you choose to present yourself in that seemingly insignificant 48×48 pixel square. If that square is empty, impersonal, or otherwise lacking any qualities that will immediately allow me to visually associate it with you, that is an immediate Follow Fail. If I am going to build a Twitter relationship with you, I want to see you, or your brand, and not, however humorous I may find it, a screen capture of a magical leoplurodon.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. You list no location, no website, or no bio

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Clearly, Twitter is all about brevity. So how difficult is it to provide a few additional characters of information that may offer potential followers more impetus to follow you in return? I’ve returned countless follows from users whose Twitter streams I’ve found “meh,” but whose listed blogs, sites, or portfolios were too amazing to not follow, or whose 160-character bios were too humorous/intriguing to pass up, or who were in the same city as me and therefore potential project collaborators.

These fields take two seconds to populate; it would behoove you to take those two seconds to populate them.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Your “website” listed is a MySpace profile

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

…or, far worse, an AngelFire “page.”

I’ll admit it: I had a MySpace profile…until I deleted it a year ago when it became obvious that only teenagers and musicians were still using it. I also had a GeoCities/AngelFire “page”…for my very first website when I first got on the Internet in 1994. If the Twitter user in question happens to be an actual teenager, or musician whose MySpace presence truly works for them, then fine. But I tend to pass over those users whose proffered web presence is, well, clearly doing it wrong.

It doesn’t take much these days to establish a web presence that seems genuine and thoughtful, and appears to intend to attract and build an online community based on the content it provides. AngelFire pages simply don’t communicate that.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. You’re following over 1,000 users, have 20 followers, and no updates

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

…or, worse, one update that includes a shamefully ill-constructed mention of Jason Calacanis.

Who, aside from those running Twitter apps that automatically follow and unfollow followers, would add these Twitter users? While I may every so often and uncharacteristically give these users a chance, simply to see what sort of content, if any, they may eventually provide, the gratuitous mention of any higher-profile Twitterer or web-famous personality means little more to me than that you were properly able to spell “Calacanis” or “Kawasaki.”


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. Your profile features any variation of “Internet expert”

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

…or “social media expert” and you have very few and/or insubstantial updates.

While I generally loathe any mention of the word “expert” in a Twitter bio, it is particularly egregious when paired with a Twitter stream of only five updates, or one with a plethora of updates that make me question your “expert” status. You’re an “expert” who is only now tweeting about a Twitter app that everyone else was tweeting about two months ago? How awesome for you! #instantfollowfail


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

6. Your updates clearly indicate that your Twitter activity is always, only, about pushing your own service/product

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

So, you have decided to use Twitter as an online marketing tool in order to sell your amazing service and/or product, and you make this glaringly obvious. I find this fabulous, because not only must this tactic be working for you, but it also allows me to immediately decide whether or not I want to follow you in return.

Since I do not use Twitter in this manner, I rarely follow any of these users in return, unless said product or service genuinely piques my interest/desire to support it.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

7. Your following and my return follow result in a poorly-constructed auto-DM reading, “Thx for the follow! How can I help you get to a 4-Hour Work Week?”

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I’ve several Twitter friends who employ the automatic direct message tool upon any new follows, but their messages are carefully crafted and, well, thoughtful, and go far beyond the garden variety “click my junk” automatic direct message. As I am an intelligent, savvy, thinking Twitter user, I am more than capable of reading all about how you can help me get to a 4-hour work week by consulting your Twitter stream, Twitter background, or website. An impersonal automatic direct message from you along these lines does not impress me, it insults my intelligence.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

8. Your most recent updates make references to any need to achieve “more Twitter followers”

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

…or “enough new followers to reach 10,000 followers by midnight!”

For me, Twitter is not a shallow popularity contest, it is about forging interesting connections and conversations with other people. My Twitter followers are far more to me than a simple follower count: they are friends, they are colleagues, they are collaborators, they are peers, and they are sources. To follow someone in return whose only intent is clearly to acquire more followers would be to devalue the esteem with which I hold my other followers.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

9. Your Twitter stream indicates a propensity for consistent arguing

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
…with your followers/random Twitter users/really anyone.

I am all for intelligent debate on any topic, and I’ve been lucky so far in meeting Twitter followers who are still able to politely debate about a variety of passionate topics without constant and vitriolic argumentation. If your Twitter stream is filled with nothing but mean-spirited opinions and argumentation that only advance your own beliefs and allow no consideration of others’ views, then my Twitter stream is definitely not for you.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

10. You do not engage your Twitter followers

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Probably the most important reason why I will not return your follow, though, is if it is glaringly obvious that you do not engage your Twitter followers. Here I suppose I need to make a distinction between those Twitter users who use Twitter to broadcast their content, as opposed to everyone else; these broadcasters, in my experience, are generally the ones who are followed, not those who are following.

Obviously, engaging their followers is not a priority. Twitter is a major platform in social networking and social media, and they aren’t called “social” networking and “social” media for nothing. There are other people out there, and if you are not engaging or interacting with those users who take the time to follow you for whatever reason, that is a huge follow fail in my book.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The three tenets

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

My list isn’t perfect, and it is definitely personal and therefore biased, but it is a start toward exploring the differences between a successful Twitter follow attempt and an outright follow fail. In the end, and to return to those previously referenced lists of “how to get more followers on Twitter,” I think there are really only three tenets that should be followed should you desire to build a successful and quality Twitter network:

1. Present a cohesive personal brand, or, if presenting a brand is too much for you, simply present a cohesive sense of yourself

2. Always be consistent in your use of Twitter, i.e., become known for the unique ways in which you use Twitter, and stick with what works for you

3. Engage with your network. Genuine engagement with your network of followers will ultimately ensure that your mobile number is retained, and not “lost,” at the end of that fabulous party, and it will ensure that you don’t (too often) commit any serious follow fails.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • The Rise of LinkedIn (Infographic)
    Here's a great article (via Mashable ) that presents a wonderful infographic (via OnlineMBA ) on the rise of LinkedIn. LinkedIn recently...
  • Monetizing Real-Time Search
    Is real-time search marketing the next big opportunity for digital marketing? This article by Scott Morrison looks at how to monetize real-t...
  • 7 steps to build a social media-enabled employee brand ambassador program
    Note: This blog post first appeared on, and is currently available at Firebrand Talent's marketing blog . Have you ever had a customer ...
  • Online Ads Surpass TV Ads In Recall and Likability
    by Wayne Friedman , Mediapost.com, Thursday, April 22, 2010, 11:32 AM New online advertising research has again shown what other studies hav...
  • It’s time to move on: Farewell Dell, hello Samsung
    I write this blog post with some regret, as I’ve really enjoyed my time at Dell, but also with a lot of excitement as I’m moving onto to wor...
  • Losing To The Social Web: Visualized
    From Digital Buzz Blog A brands website has been the single biggest ”online” focus for 99% of businesses over the last 10 years apart from ...
  • Very Unfortunate Digital Media Planning
    Digital media planning and buying can be a difficult vocation. No matter how good you are though, sometimes no matter how hard you try, you ...
  • SEO in Pictures
    Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) visualised as an infographic. Very well done by the team at Datadial . Click here for the full sized vers...
  • Search and Rescue: How to Become Findable and Shareable in Social Media
    By Brian Solis Search isn’t an isolated experience. The act of looking for information is now fused with validation, which means the social...
  • eMarketer Research Reveals Marketers Buy In to Promoted Tweets
    This is a recent artcile found on eMarketer . Twitter advertising is attracting more interest from marketers. In November, the TWTRCON confe...

Categories

  • 10
  • 2009
  • 2010
  • 2011
  • 2012
  • 2013
  • 3 Wolves
  • Advertising
  • Adweek
  • Agency
  • amazing
  • Amazon
  • ambassador
  • Apple
  • applications
  • apps
  • asia
  • australia
  • Banner ad
  • bazaarvoice
  • Best Buy
  • blog
  • brand
  • business model
  • businessweek
  • campaign
  • campaign spotlight
  • career
  • china
  • CMO
  • Coca-Cola
  • Coke
  • Content
  • cool
  • Cummings
  • customer
  • Damien
  • data
  • death
  • Dell
  • Dell Swarm
  • Demand
  • demographics
  • Digital
  • digital marketing
  • Domain name
  • e-commerce
  • effectiveness
  • email
  • Facebook
  • fail
  • fan
  • Ford
  • Game
  • games
  • Gaming
  • get to the top
  • google
  • Harvard
  • HBR
  • health
  • how to
  • IBM
  • IKEA
  • In-game advertising
  • india
  • insult
  • Intel
  • internet
  • japan
  • Kodak
  • korea
  • leadership
  • linkedin
  • logo
  • love
  • Magazine
  • marketer
  • marketing
  • Media
  • medical
  • Medical Forum
  • MedicalforumWA
  • Microsoft
  • Mobile
  • MySpace
  • newspaper
  • Nielsen
  • online
  • online advertising
  • pepsi
  • phone
  • portal
  • PR
  • program
  • radio
  • real time
  • Research
  • revenue
  • review
  • RIM
  • roi
  • sad don draper
  • sad keanu
  • Samsung
  • Search
  • SEO
  • shopping
  • skills
  • small business
  • social
  • social media
  • social network
  • Software
  • speaking
  • successful
  • telephone
  • The Upper Storey
  • thought leader
  • tips
  • Tony Ahn
  • Trends
  • twitter
  • video
  • Viral
  • web
  • website
  • Westpac
  • Windows
  • Wolf
  • world of warcraft
  • yahoo
  • year
  • सोशल media

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (5)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2012 (15)
    • ►  December (2)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  August (2)
    • ►  July (4)
    • ►  June (1)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2011 (11)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  September (3)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (3)
    • ►  January (2)
  • ►  2010 (42)
    • ►  December (2)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  October (5)
    • ►  September (5)
    • ►  August (1)
    • ►  July (7)
    • ►  April (7)
    • ►  March (7)
    • ►  February (7)
  • ▼  2009 (27)
    • ►  November (2)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (3)
    • ►  May (5)
    • ►  April (3)
    • ►  March (4)
    • ▼  February (5)
      • Email Marketing Sells Products
      • Twitter (and Social Media) Are Redefining Agencies
      • Top 10 Reasons I Will Not Follow You in Return on ...
      • Searching Blogs - More Than Just Google
      • Twitter Looks at Charging Business
    • ►  January (4)
  • ►  2008 (3)
    • ►  December (3)
  • ►  2007 (12)
    • ►  October (12)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile