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May 21 2009

Tim O'Reilly's #Twitterbook Twitter Hints and Tips – My Notes

[Excerpt from FluentSearch.com's #twitterbook notes]picture 271 Tim OReillys #Twitterbook Twitter Hints and Tips   My Notes

  • In social networks you gain and bestow status on those you associate with
  • A key function of a publishing brand (that's your personal Twitter brand) is the bestowal of status by what you pay attention to
  • If you only pay attention to yourself you are not as valuable to your community
    • You don't learn as much from your readers
    • You don't bind them to you by amplifying their voice

@jmacofearth
permalink to the fluentsearch post: http://bit.ly/twitterbook-r

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May 20 2009

myTwitter Runneth Over – How Do You Manage To Filter 1000+ Friends?

Back in the early days of mySpace there was a great Bill Maher interview with a uber-super-mySpacer about his 20k+ "friends."

[I paraphrase] "Those are not 'friends.' I can hardly keep track of my immediate family. How can you tell me, are you interested and connected to over 20k people? I mean, even in your entire lifetime that would be pretty unlikely."

"Sure I can," said the friend-rich geekster. "See, watch this." He clicked a few things on the screen of his laptop. "See, right there, I just connected with all of my friends."

"That was just spam, or sending them email."

"No, I was wishing them a happy Thursday night."

"But you don't know any of these people. You don't know a thing about them."

"Sure I do." He proceeded to click on the laptop again. "See, here are all my friends who are into Nirvana. And here with my filtering, I can see who's birthdays are coming up so I can send them a birthday card."

Maher was apoplectic. The geeky one was unperturbed. It just did not matter what Maher leveled at him, he was happy with his network of acquaintances and nothing was going to discourage him from the validity of those connections how ever frail they might appear to Maher.

So here we are with Twitter building up some unreal statistics and some false expectations about networking and connectivity. And their valuation rivaling many small countries. And I am feeling a bit like Maher, even looking at my own Twitter Stats of this moment. Following 2,797 "friends" and being followed by 3,152 "followers." Even the word followers is a bit creepy don't you think?

So how do I track these folks? What strategy have I devised for "friending" or "following" others? [I'd actually like to hear your strategies for just this issue.] Guy Kawasaki if you are listening, how do you make ANY sense of the 45k+ people you "follow?" I know you follow me. And you've even responded to an @guykawasaki tweet from me. But what do you do with the other TENS OF THOUSANDS of people you are following? Imagining an average of 2 tweets per person (weighting the Scobles and the Kawasakis of the world) that would make around 90k tweets A DAY! Ridiculous!

But I am here to share my strategy with you. And hopefully learn some more tricks and tips via comments or people tweeting back at me.

Following Others
I click on interesting names, interesting images and interesting pods of people. For example I just "friended" 5 programmers and RoR fanatics from Cardiff. And in telling my Susan about it, I heard myself say, "You know Cardiff, where they film Torchwood! Awesome!" Kinda trivial the connection behind my following them. But my interest and ability to reach out over the pond and peer in on a group of Ruby developers in the UK. Kinda cool.

And depending on what mood I'm in I will either click on the potential followee and see if their bio or tweets are of interest to me. If they are multi-level marketers, real estate mavens or foodies, I usually don't follow. [Uh, I'm not following you. Can you repeat what you just said?"] And other times, like this morning, when I find an interesting person [@Danacea Bio: Marketeer and PR for @forbiddenplanet (dotcom!); Writer, Warrior, Fitness Nut, Geek, Gamer, Art Toy Freak, Mum and Lemur!] and I've had a sufficient amount of coffee, well, I just start following. She's in London, I'm in Texas. She's an artist and lots of her friends are artists in the UK. While I am not connected to them, I am interested in art, the UK, Cardiff (because of Torchwood) and why someone would put "Art Toy Freak" in their bio. I don't even know what that is, BUT… I like it. And I like that I don't know what it is. It's the old Code is Poetry idea. Those three words facinate me, just for a second. And I like the background of her twitter page. And boom I'm off following about 30 of her friends for various and random reasons.

Filtering My "Friends"
I have two modes of Twittering. Tweetdeck and non-Tweetdeck. And I am surprised most often by the non-Tweetdeck moments, but let me come back to that.

So here is my "twitter control deck" using tweetdeck.

tweetdeckshot-2-17-09 15.4" MBP

tweetdeckshot-2-17-09 15.4" MBP

Column 1: "close"
Column 2: "social media pro"
Column 3: "all tweets"
Column 4: "@replies to me"
Column 5: "direct messages to me"
Column 6: "search for jmacofearth" (off screen)

So my priority when I open Tweetdeck to actually DO Twitter is left to right in order of priority. My close Tweeps, folks I'm on a first name basis and could call on the phone if I had a question are first in "close." Next are the Tweeps I need to keep track of, the "pros" like @GuyKawasaki and @EvansDave, not Scoble. ;-) Then everybody with "all tweets."

Then in order, "@ replies, DMs and anyone who has put jmacofearth in their tweet (in case I don't follow someone who @s me.)

Prioritizing Twitter with Tweetdeck
So as people become more interesting to me, after all this is MY FILTER, I move them from RIGHT to LEFT towards "close."

My Non-Tweetdeck Discovery Process
So I've added all these people, and I have nearly, and will soon have, over a 1000 "friends" that I am following. But mostly I pay attention to the "close" and "pro" groups. But when I open Twitter in FireFox it all merges back into one column without filtering or prioritization. And it looks something like this.

twitter.com screengrab 2-17-09

twitter.com screengrab 2-17-09

And it is here in this mode, the Twitter.com/browser mode, that people like @Danacea come up. Ping! And i read a few posts of kinda-random yet followed people and a shiny object grabs my .85 second attention span. And if I'm in a "following mood" I click on their profile to see who they are and where they live and how they describe themselves.

But when I'm in a git-r-dun mode, I move along with my business and close the browser after I've accomplished my task, not noticing the wild and brightly colored avatars or the seductive tweeter names. But that's when I'm focused.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/filtering-twitter

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Mar 24 2009

Keep Your Twits About You – Taking Charge of the MicroWeb

Category: social media,speed the webjmacofearth @ 10:56 am

I had a disconnect with a very savvy web worker the other day when I showed her my Tweetdeck layout. "It's too overwhelming," she said. "So how do you manage the people you are following?" I asked. She looked at me as if I had spoken in a foreign language. And one that she did not understand at all.

We were having breakfast at El Sol y Luna the kickoff morning of SXSW Interactive. There was another very smart web worker who also seemed confused by the "twitter control deck" across my screen. Okay, no worries. Let's see how to dissect this.

"And do you leave your Twitter window open during the day?" she followed on, trying to be helpful. "So you don't miss anything?"

[Holy cr**!]

Neither of these web savants had figured out what Twitter was about. But more so, they did not have any concept of how to control or filter the flow of information pouring through the Twitter stream.

Now the other woman spoke up, "And how do you follow more than about 20 people? That's about all I can handle before I get overwhelmed."

I worked to contain my surprise and reminded myself, I'd been Twitter-literate for almost a year. And Twitter-aware since SXSWi 06 when it was the BIG thing. Oh, and it was the BIG THING at SXSW again this year. In a different way, but with the same misunderstanding about what we do with Twitter. [This year's questions: 1. How do we "monetize" twitter? 2. What's the ROI on your enterprise Twitter team?]

So here's my observation of Twitter and my experience of it.

1. Twitter is like IM broadcasting. Calling it microblogging is confusing. (I recommend distancing yourself from that term less you get confused with how and when to use Twitter.)

2. Twitter is not something you leave open and follow. If you did you might just go crazy. Even with today's twittertools, twitter is a stream to dip your ladle into and hopefully pull out some nuggets of gold. It is not a river to dive into. You will be swept downstream. You might lose your self in the endless curiosity, the discovery that is inherent in the stream, and you might enjoy the refreshing dip into Social Media. BUT: more than likely you will wind up gasping for air and wondering how you misplaced your afternoon and got behind on your projects.

3. In order to effective in "working Twitter" you have to manage the stream of Tweets. And there are lots of tools to help you do this. I have written an extensive review of Tweetdeck and how I manage my Followers and Followees.

Tools like Tweetdeck and PeopleBrowsr can help. Plugins for Firefox or stand alone apps like Twirl can help. But you have to do something besides use http://twitter.com Because trying to keep track of, and manage Twitter in a single column of data that continuously updates before you very eyes, is like trying to drink from the proverbial fire hose. It never stops. It never slows down. And if you follow enough people, global folks, it NEVER sleeps.

So how in the world would I be able to make ANY SENSE of the Twitterverse if I am trying to watch and use any of the data streaming by on my twitter.com page? Honestly, I can't.

I do use the Twitter.com page occasionally. It is the main place you can Follow and Unfollow people. And also, as a catalyst, I occasionally watch the mono-stream tweets as they pass by, because I may find some nugget, or see someone I follow but do not have in my "close" or "pro" lists.

I can understand the desire to watch the stream. It's like the green wall of data in the Matrix. I can even see how, if my two friends imagined my Tweetdeck stream as a continuous flow of data but now in multiple columns, that it would seem overwhelming. BUT when you take control of the stream whole worlds of possibilities open up to you. But be careful to watch the edge of the stream less you slip and go down the falls roaring nearby.

And the first part of managing Twitter is getting your streams in order.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/takecharge

Related Posts:
Uber.la’s 1-2-3 Guide To Twitter: GETTING REAL with TWITTER

New Development: TwitterDestroyer.com (TwitterJoker.com readys a new app for launch)

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social media innovation group

future posts

A Collaborative Space: WebEx, Go-To-Meeting, Skype, Basecamp (Teaming/Meeting Tools)
Mapping Your Own Social Media Genome: Managing the Parts as a Whole
The Agile Mind: Construction, Evolution, Care, and Feeding Instructions for Mental Flexibility

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