It's Social Media Monday again, and that means it's time for another short post on one aspect of - you guessed it! - Social Media.
Secrets of Sustainable Tweeting
Other Posts by Ted Coine
12 Most Emboldened Questions to Live Life on Purpose - May 15, 2012
How to Recover after Being a Jerk - May 10, 2012
Are You Managing For Engagement or Performance? - May 8, 2012
10 Actions of Servant Leaders - May 8, 2012
Silent Culture Killer - May 6, 2012
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AmazingP said:
I agree that there has to be some rules and regualtions as far as we are using social media especially for business. But I also disagree with the limitations imposed by Twitter. Well, I have to admit that from time to time, I am promoting the articles I am publishing in my blog but it more of sharing rather than making money out of it.
John James said:
Unlike Beth4158, our twitter account is to help further advertise our Cheap Website Design service. However, I do feel it is a tedious task to follow every single individual that follows you, This is because a twitter allws members to follow without proper authorization unlike facebook where you have to accept each new friendship, therefore, we sometimes find that we have 100 new followers in a day? Where does one find the time to follow 100 new followers? Allow it is pretty annoying when one opens the email, goes to twitter to follow the new follower only to find out it is a false account. I believe little functionalities like this are huge a choice factor between twitter and facebook.
Cathy Yerges said:
Okay, you may have convinced me to change my policy. I typically do a quick scan of their timeline to see what they are tweeting about. If it's of interest, I follow them. If not, I don't. This is where I determine if they are only pitching their own product. However, if I can set up HootSuite to show me only the core Tweeters that I follow, I may loosen up my policy.
What does all of this say about relationship building though?
Mark Horrell said:
Totally disagree. Social media is all about engaging with people and forging relationships. But here we have a situation where people are only pretending to follow one another to boost follower numbers as they filter out one another's tweets using third-party products such as Tweetdeck. Where's the engagement? Artificial and meaningless.Beth4158 said:
Really? I follow people who tweet things that interest me. My "Followers" tally hovers around 500. At the moment, I follow 138. I don't think I'm being impolite. If people want to follow my inane musings, that's nice. But I don't tweet to promote a product or a service. It's just a micro-blog for me. My blog averages a very anemic 80 or so hits a day. By your logic, if all of those people have blogs, I'm obligated to read each of their blogs, too? I don't have time to read 80 blogs a day. Nor do they, I'm sure. Like, me, they follow a handful, I expect. But let's extrapolate this further: I read Elizabeth Gilbert's "Eat, Pray, Love." So, someday, when I write a book, I should expect her to read my book because I read her book? No. Because I chose to read her book. I didn't choose to read her book with some agenda that she'll someday read my book. I read her book because I was interested in reading her story. And her book sold how many millions of copies? So if each of those people writes a book, she should be expected to read million of books?
People who tweet and blog and such do so for many reasons: some have larger agendas to further, others do it to add their voice to the global conversation. We choose who and what interests us and proceed accordingly. I don't see anything wrong with that. Frankly, I wonder about those people who are so obsessed with getting to a certain number of followers. Why? What sort of validation is to be found in being followed by 1,000 people that doesn't exist in being followed by 500? Or any other number?
Rob Berman said:
I agree about following everyone back with some caveats.
1) clearly trying to sell something especially MLM.
2) Zero or 1 tweet with thousands of people followed and very few followers.
Rob
Anonymous said:
I agree with your approach. I want to come across as being friendly so by following my followers back seems the right thing to do. I have started to do this recently and my number of followers has doubled each week. I've met some interesting people who share similar interests.
People who don't follow just a few people are probably too interested in their own importance. I like the idea of using tweetdeck and tweetpic. I do get slightly irritated by a small group that use twitter as a text or email service just tweeting each other with in jokes etc, I don't find that interesting and they don't want to really hear anyone else's tweets either so what's the point.
Sustainable Business Forum
Ted Coine Ted Coiné is one of the most influential business leaders on Twitter and author of the book Catalyst. More »
Richard Crespin Richard Crespin is an entrepreneur and CSR adviser to executives. More »
Marc Gunther Marc Gunther is a contributing editor at FORTUNE magazine who writes and speaks about business and sustainability. More »
Kimberly Knickle Kim Knickle is a frequent conference speaker, and is responsible for research and analysis of business and IT issues. More »
Dave Meyer Dave Meyer is the founder and principal of ValueStream Performance Advisors. More »
Derek Wong Derek Wong is a Toronto based sustainability consultant. More »
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