Some Thoughts on Twitter

I know, I know. Who isn’t writing a blog post about Twitter these days. Lame, right? Thing is this: there’s just been too much to not comment. I’ve been on the service for a minute now, @halley_hopkins for those who may care, and I’ve cycled through a lot of  ”feelings” about it. I started back in March of 2007, and I have to say that my friend Bill Cammack, has summed up quite well a lot of what I think about Twitter. I’m very comfortable with saying that I agree with everything he has written in this blog post. In fact, we’ve talked extensively - to say the least, about what’s going on in the Twittersphere. I have to be honest. I have a love/hate going on with it. 

If you didn’t click on the link above and read the post and the comments, I’ll sum it up here. In the beginning it was fun. It was fun because we knew the people there. It was fun because the community was small. Now, it’s a different beast. I’m still there, because I need to be. I’m not just going to turn my account off, because that wouldn’t make any sense. I appreciate it now, for what it can do for my clients. I’m there because I need to be listening. All the time. And now the conversation is, why the hell would I want too many followers to follow, and follow more people than I know or care about. Doesn’t make sense. As I write this I realize that I really ought to go and prune back the twitter shrubery, but quite frankly I’m too damn busy. 

A few weeks ago, I realized that I hadn’t done much with my account in the last year aside from dropping my twits in a pail around election time (it was fun) and that I needed to man up and practice what I preached to all my clients. Anyhow. That’s why I’m writing here.

Round about the time that I decided I needed to jump back in on the information action train, I started looking around. And by looking, I mean looking. Generally speaking I’ve been thinking about the power of audiences, and crowdsourcing and all that great crap for a while to people who sometimes listen. I have witnesses who will attest to this.  So in the whole process of taking the temperature of the situation, I was looking at all the Twitter-famous, and noticed that there were people who were following, and being followed by a stupid number of people. But, once you get beyond the surface, you usually find a whole lot of bullshit.  More on that another time.

Anyhow, this post is about the real folks with internet credibility, with real people following them. 

Bob Lefsetz. If you give a flying F about music, our world, our anything- you need to read him. Sign up. Pay homage to the man who isn’t afraid to call anyone out, and is motivated by our collective best interests. He writes the greatest shit about music, and he writes the strongest call to action for the music industry. He puts in words our collective frustration with the machine, their silly DRM and narrow mindedness  - and all their shenanigans that keep this place from being a better place.

Bob finally came on the twitter wagon today, and I’m psyched.  I can’t wait. He’s got the goodness a-brewing.  You don’t mess with Bob. Bob has real influence. 22 hours after his first tweet, he had over 1000 followers, just from sending an email. 30 hours after, he had 2300 followers. All of this in spite of the fact that twitter was delivering a giant fail whale for anyone trying to follow for several hours. And in the conversation about who’s listening, and who’s just being that follower dude, read an email or two. You’ll soon learn that just about everyone following Bob is probably listening. It bet it’s good to be Bob. 

 

Bob's twitter feed at 2pm on April 8

Bob's twitter feed at 2pm on April 8

4 Responses to “Some Thoughts on Twitter”

  1. Bill Cammack Says:

    hmm… Good points, Halley. I just clicked over and followed Bob right now, because you’ve recommended him and I consider you an excellent judge of character. I think this might be a really good idea, to not just give follow recommendations but give the reasons WHY someone should follow someone else.

    Now that I think about it, the entire way that I initially built my Twitter followers was from already knowing about people from the Yahoo Videoblogging Group. By their contributions and conversations over the years, I knew I was following people that I wanted to hear from… mainly because when I saw their names on posts, I would click through and read what they had to say, so I was interested in their real-time thoughts as well.

    What happened to my list is that people started following me that I had no point of reference for, but in the “follow the people who follow you” format I had selected, I added them and ended up following ~2,400 people, which clearly makes it impossible to find the signal amongst the noise. I also realized that I wasn’t actually reading the stream, but responding to @replies to me, meaning there was no reason for me to be following so many people that I wasn’t actually reading unless they spoke to me directly.

    I dropped my list of people I was following down to ~600 and I’ve been building up slowly as new people add me and I actually take the time to check out their profiles and decide whether I want to listen in to their stream or not. By dropping ~1,800 people, I lost around 200 followers, but so what? I have 2,300 now instead of 2,500. So what? I’m not planning to cash these people in for a prize on my way out the door, so what difference does it make how many people are following me? It’s not giving me more cred as an editor or a videoblogger, so who cares?

    Anyway, it’ll be interesting to see what happens when the smoke clears. I’m happy for the Twitter guys as a team, that they built something so useful and so cherished by many, but this Twitter-Frenzy is outlandish, with people running around trying to gain followers that they have no idea what to do with.

  2. admin Says:

    Love it Bill.

    “I’m not planning to cash these people in for a prize on my way out the door, so what difference does it make how many people are following me? ”

    Well put.

    “I’m happy for the Twitter guys as a team, that they built something so useful and so cherished by many, but this Twitter-Frenzy is outlandish, with people running around trying to gain followers that they have no idea what to do with.”

    Couldn’t agree more.

    My challenge is differentiating between what’s real and what’s hype, and of course, what’s the point. Not my point, or your point perse, but the point of the frenzy and the folks who are all caught up in it. Not sure that I really care about it at all, but it’s so in your face, how do you not at least formulate some commentary. *shrug.

    Thanks for stopping by Bill. Love the Cammack/Dating Genius perspective always.

  3. AndrewBoldman Says:

    I really liked this post. Can I copy it to my site? Thank you in advance.

  4. admin Says:

    Absolutely, Andrew. Go for it.

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