Twitter Success Does Not Mean Becoming a Follower Yuppie
I am alive, well, and it’s great to be posting again. I thought I would share some of my thoughts on the twitter follower craze and why blindly building a huge follower list will not only waste your time, but dampen your twitter success.
The More You Follow, The Less You Connect
Above all else, social networking is about, well… socializing and networking online. It’s about making connections with other people who share common interests, goals, and mutually benefit from communicating with you.
The more people you follow, the less people you can effectively connect with. A huge list of “followed” results in a wall cluttered with a bombardment of messages, most not even directed toward you. The chance that you’ll be able to read any single person’s update reduces substantially every time you follow someone new.
To make sure you get the information you need and receive messages from people you want to establish an online relationship with, whether for personal, entrepreneurial, or entertainment reasons, you need to be picky. Only follow those people worth listening to, who provide useful information, and who create value in your life. Avoid the hacks with tens of thousands of followers, who follow tens of thousands of others, and just spew out a bunch of marketing garbage every 30 seconds. They do not care about you, they just care about getting your money and wasting your time.
If you seek to mechanically follow thousands yourself, you show you do not care about the many individuals who follow you because you most likely you will never see their messages. As an example, a client of mine posts frequently to market herself. When I first built my Twitter list, I too randomly followed people to push my numbers up. The several months I used Twitter, I saw merely one post from my client, one out of many that went up every day. Imagine all the posts I never saw from people who casually post, people who I am missing the chance to establish a viable relationship with.
I want to hear what my clients have to say because the more I know about their business, passions, and needs, the better I can help them with their goals.
The More They Follow, The More You’re Ignored
The fad keeps preaching “you follow me, I’ll follow you” and many automated services exist to increase numbers by building lists based on reciprocated follows. However, the more people others follow, the less updates of yours they will read, if any. How does that help you? It doesn’t…
Think about it, if JoeShmoe follows 34,318 people, that’s 34,318 possible messages a day that scrolls through his wall. If he’s following many of the people who build their lists this way, you can multiply that number by 24, 48, even 100, because most of those guys use their twitter account as a marketing ticker. You’re messages will just get buried in cyberspace, never read, never connecting, never helping you grow your business or make more money. Just wasting your time, your cash, and your effort.
What’s the Real Twitter Gold Standard?
Just look at the really successful people on Twitter – the celebs, the industry gurus, the information and communication super stars. Millions follow these people, but many of them follow less than 100 others. That’s because they value their time and want to spend it reading meaningful posts. People follow them not because they reciprocated the follow, but because they actually earned their followers by attraction.
Your goal should not be to follow as many people so that many people follow you, your goal on twitter should be to follow people you want to listen to and connect with, and gain followers who want to listen and connect with you. Your goal should be to earn MORE followers than people you follow, to earn followers simply because people DESIRE to follow you. That’s really what twitter is all about.
How to Start Fixing Your Twitter List
Wipe it out and clean it up.
Awhile ago a colleague of mine completely cleaned out her client’s twitter list, along with Facebook’s, because she found it full of meaningless connections and people not really interested in her client’s business. She rebuilt it from the ground up using a basic Internet marketing principle… stay within your market or niche.
The client’s business focuses on MMA training, so she sought out similar minded people in the industry, people who would be interested in establishing joint ventures and other people just enthusiastic about martial arts. After building the list up, she saw her client’s bounce rate from twitter referrals fall from the 90% range to the 20% range. That’s huge! The number of referrals also shot up. Quality over quantity counts big time.
I’ve begun to do the same thing, removing all the people…
- following more than 10,000
- who follow the same amount of people that follow them
- who post every couple minutes, or every hour
- who repeatedly post the same marketing tag lines
- who only post about their products and business
You know these people, they’re called spammers. We all hate them and we would all like to get rid of them. Well on twitter, you can! Sure, you’ll see your followed numbers go down initially, because most of these people won’t continue to follow you unless you follow them. But guess what, you don’t need to follow everyone that follows you. You need to focus on who brings you value and insight and follow them. If you like the info ProBlogger posts every day, follow him. Seek out your interests when looking for people to follow.
And if people don’t want to follow you then your problem really falls into the category of not creating enough benefit. That’s something you need to fix on your own.
Note: As an alternative now to cleaning out all your following duds, you can add everyone you want to follow to organized lists. However, this could be just as time consuming.
Creating Benefit and Value for Your Followers
This is not necessarily a marketing piece, so I will be brief on this topic. Communication goes both ways, you need to listen as much or more than you tell. People can spot a dedicated marketer when they see one and it turns people away, big time. Focus on building relationships on twitter, getting to know people, creating relationships and trust. Give people useful, quality induced information and they will thank you for it. Keep pitching them products and up-selling them, and you deserve to get dropped.
Apply This Philosophy to Other Social Networks
Facebook, LinkedIn, twitter…. You can use the principles here on any social network.
- Concentrate on the relationships, not the numbers.
- Search for your people in your field, not just any random person that will befriend you because they need a few more on their list.
- Participate in groups and discussions related to your interests.
- Listen instead of preach.
- Inform instead of sell.
Stick by these rules and quality will beat out quantity. You will see a better response and bigger rewards for your efforts. You will be one step closer to twitter success. Sure, it’s more difficult and more of a struggle than just randomly clicking away for new followers, but it’s more fun too! Social interaction brings lasting enjoyment and business. It’s the real key unlocking the secrets to using this medium for business endeavors.
As for the twitter twits out there with their follower building scams, drop’em and block’em!
Comments
Tamera Nelson (Sep 09, 2009)
This is a wonderful article. I sometimes feel guilty for declining a friend’s request on Facebook or not accepting someone’s request to follow me on Twitter.
Your explanation of the proper use of these Social Network sites makes me feel better about wanting to network with those I know or who I can learn from and hopefully share with as well.
Suzanne Saxe-Roux (Sep 09, 2009)
Great points on who to follow. I am still figuring out who is following me so i can be of value.
Shari Weiss (Sep 09, 2009)
very thought-provoking . . . and I agree with your basic philosophy about social networking being about relationship building.
One point to keep in mind, though, si that with a desktop app like Tweetdeck, you can keep all of your clients in a manageable group.
I have another story to tell about the value of lots of followers, but the background is so dark I cannot read what I’ve already written . . . and can’t see if I’ve misspelled anything.
Good post, though.
Randall Klopping (Sep 10, 2009)
Good post, I tend to treat twitter as a means to practice my social skills, meet and learn about all kinds of people and to occasionally show off what I can do. Thus I don’t worry much about whose following me. I look at each, ones that intrique me I follow, ones who don’t I don’t and ones like some of the porn spammers (bots usually) I block and report.
Kammy (Sep 10, 2009)
Good reminders. With tools like Hootsuite you can follow accounts without becoming a follower, so I think the tide is going to change as more people in the know use them and more people are aware of what stats really have meaning (hootsuite also shows me my most popular tweets, so I can bring more value to my followers).
I am trying to follow those I can have a relationship with and just group those who I want to get news/scoops from.
Linda Stanley (Sep 14, 2009)
Great piece using common sense in social networking.
People need to start handling social networking with their brains and not their egos!
Thanks for the post.
Michael Wilkins (Sep 14, 2009)
This was a very good and informative article people should be using social media to network and build relationships with people and to introduce themselves, their skills, and topics of interest and follow those with the same common interests.
Internet Marketing Facts to Help Jumpstart Your Business « Warren Samu (Dec 23, 2009)
[...] A majority of people now spend their time online interacting on social networks like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and to an extent, YouTube. All of these sites offer ways for you to connect with potential clients and customers by participating or creating groups in your market, creating specific business pages for the interested to follow, and sending out informative and entertaining updates to your social connections. Before you jump into the social networking scene, please read some friendly advice on growing your connections and followers. [...]