Monday 18 May 2009

Hits and tips for twittering to more than 100 followers

Twitter is great. It provides a platform to link with like minded people and when used correctly can boost your book sales/business/website hits/blog visits. However, the basic Twitter page is hopeless once you top more than about 100 followers. The solution is to find yourself a Twitter Client. My client of choice is TweetDeck.

The key to large scale twittering is the realisation that no matter how much you try you simply can't give every one of your followers your full attention. Instead you must stay focused on the people that offer you the most value. The tool that allows this to happen (for me) is Tweet Deck.

Once you have TweetDeck installed and up and running here are some hints and tips at becoming an effective twitterer to more than 100 followers:

Using Groups

THE best feature of Tweetdeck is the ability to create groups. Automatically created is a group called All Friends. The biggest problem that you face when dealing with large groups of twitterers is keeping an eye on the tweets that are useful to you and this is where a skilful use of grouping comes in handy.

On my tweet deck I have these groups:

5000+

This contains people I am following who themselves have more than 5000 followers. A mention in the twitter stream of one of these big boys can earn you loads of followers.

Commentable

This group contains all the people I follow whose tweets I comment on regularly. I like to keep these all in one place and give them the most attention.

Interesting

These are people who I follow and find interesting. They will have less then 5000 followers and will not have been promoted to the commentable group.

Local

Here I put all the twitterers I follow who have a local link.

Replies and Direct Messages

These groups are created automatically and house all those juicy @replies and DMs.

Using search

Tweetdeck makes it possible to set up a few groups based on search terms and this can be very handy. I have one with the term BubbleCow. This means anyone mentioning BubbleCow will appear in the group. This can be very handy.

Dipping into All Friends

I like to spend ten or fifteen minutes each day looking through my All Friends stream. If anything catches my eye I simply promote them to Interesting.

The power of the @reply

One criteria I use for moving followers from the All Friends group to Interesting is an @reply. If a follower ReTweets one of my tweets or takes the time to @reply to me I automatically promote them, after all it is active twitterers who I am looking to spend my time following closely.

This is just how I use Tweetdeck and I hope it will give you a few ideas. However, one thing I would like to drive home is that I am not the only person using Twitter this way. One of the keys to building a good twitter following is to know your audience, know what they want and try and make your tweets as valuable to them as possible.

So are you using Tweetdeck? I would love to hear any of your tips and tricks.

Related posts:

A writer's guide to Twitter

Twitter's @reply error

6 comments:

  1. I use TweetDeck too, but only have one group separated from the rest: my fellow writers! I hadn't thought of creating several different groups, though that would definitely organize things better - which keeps you more connected with your Tweeps.

    But no matter how my Tweeps are categorized, I can only afford to dip in and out of the stream a few times a day. I'm in awe of Tweeps who are consistent and regular....I usually pop in when I find a great writing tidbit or newsflash. Love being able to share what I'm learning!

    Thanks for this post, Bubblecow :-)

    Laurie

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for the post! I've been thinking about installing TweetDeck at home (can't really here at work), but wasn't sure yet. I think I will tonight. I really try to keep up with everyone, but the "stream" gets away from me since I can only check in a few times during the day (pesky work and all). Then I get on in the evening, and everyone's quieter. I think this will help quite a bit.

    Jamie (VarietyPages on Twitter)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Laurie PK - I see Twitter as a TV channel. It is either on or off. When it is on I see tweets and respond. When it is off they just pass me by. Tweetdeck helps to make sure I am seeing the correct tweets.

    Jamie - Let me know how it goes.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Nice post - I'd got by with TwitterFox while only following a few, but now it's out of control (in a nice way) TweetDeck is an essential.

    I confess to only having two groups (apart from Replies, Facebook Status and DMs) - 'Hot' and 'Not'.

    'Hot' are the people I want to read for sure, 'Not' are those who pump out too many tweets or who I want to keep an eye on, but don't get too excited about. Works well for me.

    BubbleCow is (of course) in the 'Hot' group.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Brian - I think the key is to have enough groups to allow you to find the tweets that give value. Thanks for the hot - you are in interesting.

    Whilst on the subject of Tweetdeck I found this post which tells you how to save groups.

    http://www.online-tech-tips.com/computer-tips/move-transfer-tweetdeck-settings/

    ReplyDelete