Tonight I declared Twitter bankruptcy.

Earlier today, I joked with a friend that had unfollowed me on Twitter.

I said:

Three – you unfollowed me on twitter. I almost deleted my account that day, because it was a black, black day in the micah twitter world. I am only joking through my tears… :)

He said:

No worries ;) I still read every blog entry. I could explain better in person. I think you are one of the most awesomest people in the industry, I just use twitter differently than others. (emphasis mine)

For some reason, that really got me thinking. What do I use Twitter for?

Until now, it was clear to me. Access and interaction. I have tweeted my cell phone number (720-231-7120). I have tweeted my exact location via brightkite (add me if you want to). I tended to tweet often (according to TweetStats).

But as most things go, has Twitter value changed for me? Was I using it differently than others? Should I change how I use Twitter?

I took a look at the people that I admire for their openness, accessibility, quality of message, frequency of message and purpose of message.

There was a pretty big range.

My friends like Chris Brogan, Gary Vaynerchuk and Robert Scoble [people that use twitter both as an interactive tool and as a promotional tool] tended to follow about as many people as followed them. In most cases, the number of followers/following numbered in the tens of thousands. They tweet about 60 times per day.

My friends like Brad Feld and Eric Marcoullier [people that use twitter as a brain dump and a interactive tool] tended to have a couple of thousand followers, but only follow a couple of hundred folks. They tend to tweet about 6-7 times per day. (Apparently except for drunken times in Las Vegas at CES. One more ice cream tweet from you, Brad Feld, and you are unfollowed!)

I sat squarely in the middle. I have about 3,000 followers and followed around 750 people. I tweet 20 times per day. Most of my tweets were random thoughts, interactions or promotions.

So what to do? Experiment time.

I decided to do three things:

1) I would go through my following list (770+) and cull it. The intent was to get down to 200-300.

2) I would tweet less per day. Not sure how much less, but perhaps half as much?

3) Because I am tweeting less, I decided I needed to be more thoughtful about what I tweet as well as more judicious with the @replies. Basically, before replying ask myself this question “Is this something that would benefit everyone, or just that one person?” If it was just that one person, I would send a DM.

Seems simple enough.

I started culling. Here are the rules I followed (pun not intended!) to unfollowing:

  • Do you follow me?
  • Do I recognize you?
  • Do I remember a tweet from you in the last week?
  • Do I feel bad unfollowing you for any reason?
  • Have I met you face to face AND have we interacted more than if we were at a cocktail party?
  • Do I consider you a friend?

My following list went from 770-ish to 427, a lost of about 340-ish.

The next step was to determine why I would follow someone:

  • They interact with me enough to become an “online connection”;
  • I have dinner or drinks with them;
  • The potential for sex (just checking if you are still with me, or if you have completely puked by now);
  • Their preferred form of communication is twitter.

It was amazing. I set up Tweetdeck with four columns. All Friends, Direct Messages, Search @micah (so I can get all replies), and a Group: Friends (which is a subset of All Friends). People I hadnt see a tweet from in awhile, but were people that I really like, started to bubble up. Suddenly, the enormous cocktail party in a ball room, became a lavish dinner party at my house (if my house could fit 400 people in it lavishly).

I began to enjoy twitter more. It was like when I first started using Twitter when I was excited to see what my friends were saying.

For the next week or so, I am going to keep my following number low. I think its interesting and useful to understand the different ways that Twitter can be used. I will try and keep my tweeting to around 10 per day, with 3-4 of those @replies. There will be probably a huge jump in my direct message count, IMs, emails and other forms of content. Most of my tweets will be brain dumps (ideas) or promotional. Most of my @replies will be interactive in nature.

Curious to see if it modifies other online behavior (will people follow me less; unfollow me more?) Will I use Facebook, instant messaging, or (gasp!) the phone more?

Will I blog more often?

Hmmmm…..

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Popularity: unranked [?]

  • I'm looking forward to the day where I can authorize direct messages without having to follow. I feel this would solve a lot of problems.
  • Probably true. At the same time, its just the pure volume of
    information. Can I handle it? Sure. Does it make my life easier to
    have less of it, yup.
  • Preaching to the choir, man.
  • I'm glad you still follow me, Micah. And I'm being 100% sincere when I say that.

    Great post...and timely since I recently culled my following list.

    The #1 reason why I follow people is.....ready???...do they make me laugh? Are they themselves? Are they interesting? Are they someone I would want to hang with at least once for a drink or a basketball game? But most of all, do they make me laugh?

    Negative, whiny, woe-is-me 24/7 people I cannot stomach, so I tend to drop them shortly after adding them. I mean, it's ok to complain...we all do it. But people that do that incessantly? Yuck, not for me! (Also...if you don't Tweet for several months, I'll drop you.)

    At my peak of Twittering I followed maybe 80 people. Now I follow 46 and 44 follow me. It doesn't break my heart if people don't follow me back, altho it would rock if some of them did...especially the funnier ones.

    Finally, some of the people I <3 to follow I got from following you, so YAY Micah!
    :-)
  • Admit it Micah, you are just jealous because you want to be in Vegas eating ice cream. Yummy. Twice in one day. Nothing like Vegas.
  • @bfeld - I will admit that I am jealous because I would love to be in Vegas eating ice cream twice in one day. You making an In-N-Out run too?
  • It hadn't occurred to me to go get an In-and-Out burger fix. Since I'm a veggie I enjoy my In-and-Out grilled cheese sandwich.
  • Sorry! I had no idea you were a veggie.
  • Tell that to your ass. I just lost 10 lbs last week, and I'm going to
    be super good in Vegas (as I sit in a McDonalds at the airport).

    Sent wirelessly. Excuse the typos, I was born with phat fingers.
  • Quality over quantity. I believe what you are aiming for is an efficient process that does not result in a drain of time. So many social applications are just that....a waste of time...I believe we will begin to see work/life applications that bridge commercial commerce applications into the social sphere. The current landscape of social networks and microblogs is awfully noisy and they are going to have a difficult time growing and monetizing these platforms.
  • Again, I think an oversimplification. Its not a question of quality
    over quantity. Its the question of the right quality. Hearing the
    right voices. I was missing the people I wanted to hear.
  • Could you have a set up tweetdeck to only show the tweets from the 400 people you decided to keep following, and have silently ignored the other 350ish people you unfollowed? The net effect may have been the same.
  • I could have with it's grouping feature. But each group will be
    dynamic, so it's hard to manage. Plus, I do that now with a much
    smaller group that I want to make sure I don't miss.

    Sent wirelessly. Excuse the typos, I was born with phat fingers.
  • robjohnson
    ahh...the let's not offend someone's twitter ego solution.
  • Well, I do wish Twitter didn't show follower count. It would make it Twitter so less pretentious and could truly change its dynamic and the way its used.
  • I'm with Ryan

    If you are using Tweetdeck, why on earth would you want to unfollow so many people, if you're going to make categories anyways? It's not that you'll miss a whole hellova lot, but now there's an empty tub with a baby and the bathwater on the floor.
  • I think you are over-simplifying it. The truth is that my following
    and follower list is dynamic. I would rather it manage itself.
  • Completely empathize with you here, Micah. I did the exact same thing last week with both my Twitter and my RSS reader. As for with Twitter, I also unfollowed a bunch of people and created a group in Tweetdeck. Like you said, it's not just about only paying attention to the people in your group, there's something about doing the right thing with your list. There are people that are just not relevant at all anymore, they were followed on a whim or similar.

    And wow, how much more wonderful is Twitter now that almost all the posts I read are by the few I'm closer with or interested in their insight.

    I hope some others will follow your lead to help keep Twitter relevant.
  • You've almost exactly described how i use twitter. i can't imagine following tons of people that i don't know just for marketing purposes. good call. i think you'll be happier with it.
  • Very interesting. If I was more motivated, attentive, or confident in my choices to unfollow, I'd probably do the same thing. Maybe in the near future.

    Note: I see I didn't make the cut. *sigh* Ah well, it was fun while it lasted.
blog comments powered by Disqus