Is Twitter just about one-way traffic?

News of the recent sale of the apparently essential Twitter management platform Tweetdeck to Twitter for £25 million got me thinking about this form of social media, how it is used and how useful I’m finding it. And I must confess that after two years of tweeting, I’m still have some misgivings. My key problem is that, as a communications channel it seems very binary: it’s either about listening or talking. Even using Tweetdeck its difficult to do both at the same time effectively. And I find this a bit frustrating.

Personally I have two objectives from twitter:

* To follow key contacts/opinion formers to understand what they are saying and hence key trends in the market.
* To extend B2B marketing’s audience and reach as far as possible, and use Twitter to drive traffic to our website.

I can do the former by following key opinion formers and notable people in the industry, scanning their tweets for any particularly choice nuggets of information, and using this to further my knowledge. In this respect, it’s doing pretty much the same thing as email, and personally I would say less effectively, as the character limit often gives authors little option but to ‘tease’ interest with enigmatic posts, inevitably requiring a click to view the full story. I find this frustrating – I don’t want to have to click twice to know whether this post is relevant to me (yes, I’m fully aware that makes me sound lazy and like I have quite a short attention span).

Whilst I personally prefer email for my inbound content as it is flexible in terms of the information it delivers, I can see that following can be a good way of keeping track of a limited number of key individuals, allowing you to respond quickly to their behaviour.

The problem comes if you’re also trying to use Twitter to push out content, as I am. To do this, you obviously need to create a significant base of followers, and I’m reliably informed that the best way to do this is to follow anyone you can find who might be interested in your content in the hope that they follow you back. This is all very well, but it generally means you ratio of followers to those you are following is pretty even, and that consequently the sheer volume of updates that you will receive in your ‘friends’ column will become simply overwhelming. If you are following several hundred people, you will have no time to filter, read or let alone absorb what is coming in, and as a result you’ve effectively destroyed your ability to use Twitter as inbound information tool.

Of course, there are lots of clever things you can do around hashtags and searches in different columns, but I find it odd that users effectively have to make a choice between either one of these two primal Twitter objectives (talking and listening) – at least as far as I can see. Perhaps I’m missing something – if so, feel free to point that out, whatever it might be.

In the meantime, I would hope that this kind of functionality might be something that the people at Tweetdeck (now part of Twitter) could think about for their upcoming releases and enhancements. After all, this management platform will have to maintain its steep evolution curve if it is to justify the hefty price paid by Twitter, and ensure it remains the defacto tool.

3 comments

Hi Joel, while I agree with

Hi Joel, while I agree with some of your views on Twitter, I'd disagree with the fact that you have to follow a lot of people in order to get a lot of followers. You get followers by being interesting! If you say interesting enough things, people will see them and follow you without you having to follow them first. Look at the FT on Twitter (@ft), for example - it's following just 46 people, but has 313,000 followers!

Hi Joel, interesting point,

Hi Joel, interesting point, but I think you overlook the obvious fact that it's pretty hard to have a conversation in 140 characters, which is why twitter is mostly about communicating and listening. But if you look at it as one of many of your business tools, and not as an all-in-one business solution, twitter can play an important role, especially as a B2B tool. It can absolutely keep you up to date with the best blogs and articles - B2B's own twitter @marketingb2b is a hugely successful example of one of these, and if you find you're following too many information sources for one column, then Tweetdeck's simple to use columns system (that you kind of glossed over) helps you to keep this manageable. It can also help build communities (sometimes temporary, sometimes long-term) via hash tags, and there's many a story of business associations that have started on twitter. I could go on, but this will turn into a blog in its own right!

Good to see the Twitterati

Good to see the Twitterati leaping to the channel's defence! Fiona: I take your point but I would contend that the FT kind of breaks the rules as its a massively famous and successful media brand, rather than an individual commentator. No mere mortal could hope to do this well out of Twitter! Giff: I'm very much aware of how successful B2B Marketing's own twitter activity is, and grateful for it, and I'm not saying that Twitter isn't a good tool... only that on an individual level you have to focus on one thing or the other. The columns in Tweetdeck are great, but you can't filter random comments from all contributors - hence information overload.

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