Following Your Followers

Posted on 01 June 2009

The widely held view is that you should have balance between your follows and followers. So, let’s do some sums….

Let’s say an average Twitter user sends 20 messages per day and this is a mix of comments, RTs and original content

And a day is a 10 hours period. (I am not suggesting that you have to do a ten hour day!

So for the purpose of this exercise, an average Twitter user sends two tweets per hour evenly over the day. And, of course, this doesn’t happen in reality!

Let’s see what impact that has on your ability to consume and respond:

Follows

Tweets per hour

Tweets per day

10

20

200

50

100

1,000

200

400

4,000

500

1,000

10,000

1,000

20,000

200,000

Remember, this is in addition to what you are tweeting and responding to in the interest your tweets have generated.

Now, tweeting is also in addition to running your business sure it’s a channel but, to only a very small number is it their whole business.

If you use applications such as Tweetdeck or Outwit, you can set up groups. This effectively zones out tweets from people you are following but aren’t really interesting in.

How does this stack up with transparency?

I say it doesn’t!

This is applying the old marketing ideas and models to the new paradigm.

You can not be a member of more than a few tribes without becoming a lurker and that’s not the same as participating.

Large numbers of follows works in the short term, but we run our businesses for the long term, don’t we?

Share and Enjoy:
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