As long as I’m talking about Twittering,
I have two Twitter accounts—one is my “professional” one, where I follow and
comment on things like Agile product development methodologies, software and companies I’m interested in, and news affecting the high tech sector. The
other is associated with my blog, so I follow whoever seems interesting and occasionally comment on things that strike my fancy.
Just like I do, you know, here.
The thing about Twitter is—there is a freaking 24x7
tsunami of absolute, idiotic, pointless, badly-spelled crap out there. Being on
the “business” side is no defense from this, because there are plenty of
self-proclaimed “thought leaders” (God give me strength the next time someone
introduces him/herself to me as that meaningless term, because all I want to do
is shove a fistful of infographics down their throats) who spew and re-spew
factoids and injunctions on how to capitalize on this or that trend.
The worst offenders are the “thought leaders” in “social
media”. They’ve got bots churning these things out at a rate of knots, and when they’re not tweeting, they’re retweeting crap like you wouldn’t believe.
And by “retweeting”, I mean not only do they RT the maxims of others, they
just take what they sent out a few hours ago and post them again, either as
something new or a RT.
Yes, they RT their own tweets.
If someone retweets a post of theirs, they retweet the
retweet. If someone mentions them in a tweet, they retweet. It’s all about
getting your Twitter handle in the feeds of your followers, your little avatar
in their faces.
On my professional account, I follow about 300 people.
Most are in the SaaS software and social fields—they’re the ones who
automatically follow you if you follow them. The socialites are also the ones
tweeting at least 500 times per day. Some work for companies I’m interested in;
since they have actual, you know, jobs, they’re somewhat more measured in their
output.
Even so, after going away and returning to Twitter after a few hours, it's not possible for me to actually read all the hundreds of tweets and retweets that have accumulated in my feed. I have no idea what people who are following tens of thousands of twitterers do.
(I’ll say that it’s also interesting how tech companies
use social media. I don’t follow companies on Facebook, because that’s not
where you find B2B engagement. But when I follow a, say, SaaS company
specializing in tag management and big data analytics, which only has 700
followers and 1400 tweets…well, they’re not really taking advantage of the
platform. But it’s hard to point that out to them in an interview. For some
reason, it doesn’t seem to play well when you tell them they’re not actually
sitting at the cool kids’ table in this regard. At the least, they’re not
taking a systematic approach to expanding their reach, which—if done
right—should cost them not very much and at least gain them some social
street cred. Just sayin’.)
I admit to being a mere padawan in this field. So I find
it interesting that I’ve figured more out about it than some companies who tout
themselves as being on the bleeding edge of some bleeding edge technology.
I’ll speak tomorrow about some of the specific crap that
comes my way—mostly via the blog-related account.
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