Proper Twitter Etiquette, What is it?
Posted by Nick O'Neill on April 3rd, 2008 11:52 AM
Recently I’ve been hearing a lot of people talking about Twitter and whether it is the ultimate tool for communication or if it has been abused by ruthless self-promoters (I’m definitely not one of those
). A few months ago while using Twitter I started noticing that people were promoting their blog posts via the site. I decided to join in on the fun and now see the benefits of notifying people of new posts.
I have heard other people say that this automated model of self-promotion is unacceptable and that it is simply cluttering their Twitter stream. For myself, I feel as though posting blog posts is a relatively uneventful twitter update and really doesn’t cross the threshold of continuous self promotion that we are beginning to witness on the site. As I’ve been reiterating for the past two days, the social web is most effective for building brand you.
The techniques used to build brand you could be to simply write a blog post once a day or alternatively to write each post and tell as many people about it as possible in the hope that they’ll tell their friends. I myself have leveraged a number of guerrilla social web marketing practices and so have a number of other people that I know of. Just ask Jesse Thomas how to market yourself and he’ll give you 500 ways to drive traffic to your site.
So the question remains, what is proper Twitter etiquette? Where’s the line when promoting yourself? Are there any rules? Perhaps out of this discussion we can create a guide to Twitter etiquette.











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But dear Lord, please turn off the Flickr Auto-Tweet feature! (I'm looking at you Chris Abraham!)
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http://twitter.com/tencommandments
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1) Auto-posting new blog posts to twitter via the Wordpress My Tweets plugin is an essential method for me to keep my friends up to date on what i'm doing. I encourage everyone to do so. It's definitely okay.
2) Promoting events your sponsoring, organizing etc. are cool. People want and need to know this stuff.
3 Following 1000s of people just to get follow backs is SPAM. It's not okay. It sucks.
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On that note... if it changes your facebook status all day, and all day every day your status is one of the 3 that's visible to your friends, you can guarantee you've had a negative effect on their image of you
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First, is people who purposely follow hardly anyone (or no one like Tim Ferris does) and then brag about how many followers they have. Twitter is a conversation tool and to think that others should listen to you without you giving them the courtesy of listening back...rude.
Second, is when people tell other people what they should and should not tweet about it. If you don't like it, just unfollow them, but leave them to their own devices.
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Second: don't pimp your products constantly.
third: respond to threads, create your own ideas too
fourth: try to contribute at least 10% of what you consume.
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In the long term it does more harm that good. It adds more and more noise to the once powerful signal. Sure if you are in it for the moment, perhaps it is something to utilize. If you are trying to establish a large base that follows you wherever you go (ala Ze Frank, Merlin Mann, Garyvee and others) then I would advise against it.
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Me, I think people should limit themselves to 5-10 posts a day. We'd all be a lot happier, and their posts would be more valuable.
Also, if someone follows me that has 2x more overall tweets than me, I don't follow back because I know they're going to be one of those 50-percenters.
twitter.com/povertyjetset
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For me, I love when my friends post links to their new blog posts - because I'm not a feed-reader and I like to know. But if that's ALL you do with Twitter? I'm probably not following you.
Use Twitter howsoever best suits you - and those who agree will follow - those who do not always have the power not to follow.
:)
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Ultimately all of these things are subject to personal tasted. I have had easily 50 people un-follow me due to the volume of my tweets or the promotion but 700+ followers are fine with it. I think there's definitely a trade off.
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Tweeting for business (I am @ribbit) I am there to learn and listen. I try to find people related to our dev community (Flex, Flash, Ruby, anyone interested in voice, VoIP, Android, iPhone...we're an open platform for voice as object in Web apps) and engage in conversations about our direction, our company, what we're working on, cool things that happen. We're early-stage, but over time I could see announcing updates to our dev platform, new releases from our dev community, things happening in our store...stuff of real value. We will also continue to ask questions...so far, our followers have been really cool about answering.
It hits me that this Twit world is a lot like the "real" world. Talking to yourself is kinda crazy. Having a conversation is kinda awesome. Maybe if it's not good enough to get a response, most of the time it's not worth saying?
Deep thoughts (not), but just what hit me.
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There are some really scary things coming out of the local tracker I have running. One post being submitted by 5 different usernames (for example). The great thing about it is I do have the choice to un-follow, and I don't. In the end, the people that provide viable content will last and retain followers, however the public stream will become as polluted as the Potomac.
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You need to be "real" and you need to be part of the conversation. Ultimately, "New Blog Post: XYZ" is not a great conversation starter but if I posted it with a question, I think it would be acceptable.
The real question is if there is any effectiveness in twitter spam. If there is, then I think we will see more spam. I don't consider what I'm doing necessarily spam but as I just said, "New Blog Post:" probably isn't the best way to do it.
None of the people reading this blog are typically the spammers that you speak of. I think there is a big distinction between the self-promoters and Twitter spammers though.
In regular marketing don't a lot promotions end up pissing a few people off? Is that really a horrendous thing?
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Can you deliver value through status updates/Tweets (see http://www.jer979.com/igniting-the-revolution/o...
As for my approach, when someone starts to follow me, I look at his/her profile and last few tweets...if it is what I am looking for, i'll sign up, but I also prune the network to reduce noise.
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