To Follow or Not to Follow
When you are building your Twitter network, one of the big things you need to consider is who to
follow and who not to follow. Some people follow everyone who follows them, but if you are
using Twitter to grow and promote your business, you will need to have a bit more strategy
than that.
If you intend to connect to people who will purchase your products or services or enhance
your business in some other way, indiscriminately following anyone who follows you isn't
going to cut the mustard. As with any other marketing strategy, you need to develop a
targeted group of followers on Twitter if you expect to earn any money from them. No one's
business product or service appeals to everyone and if you try to market yours to the whole
of the Twitterverse, you're wasting your time and your effort.
So how do you decide who to follow and who not to follow? There are a few tricks you can
use to choose your followers in a more selective manner in order to market your business
most effectively.
- Look at a potential follower's Twitter stream. Go to their home page and read their
Twitter stream for a page or two. What do you see? Are they constantly promoting themselves?
You may want to take a pass. Do they provide useful links to other people's websites? They
could be entertaining as well as helpful to your business. Do they talk about things
pertaining to your expertise? Common interests are a definite plus when choosing a follower,
so you may want to give those with similar interests a chance.
- Look at who is following them. Every profile page has a list of the person's followers.
You can click the link on the upper right hand side of the page that says followers or you
can move through the grid of photos further down the page. Look for followers you have in
common. This can be a good indicator of mutual interests. Look for high profile people in
your field of interest. Many of the biggest names on Twitter only follow people who are
relevant to their business. This doesn't mean to imply it is a good decision, but it could
lead to some influential or at least interesting people to follow.
- Follow the public Twit stream and look for people who are interesting, funny or helpful.
Click on their username to get to their profile page and look around a bit to see if they
sound interesting to you.
- Use Twitter search. At the bottom of the page is a clickable link to Twitter search.
Once there, you can enter in a key word or phrase and click search. You will find all the
recent replies using the term. If you use a relevant key word, this can be an excellent way
of finding followers interested in your business.
- Try an off-site service like Twitter Grader. Twitter Grader will rank the reach and
authority of your Twitter username based on how many people you follow, how many follow you
and how many updates you have made.
While this is interesting information, the truly useful feature is the list of suggested
followers Twitter Grader will provide to you. Based on common interests and common followers,
you will find suggestions of people in your area of expertise. Now, here's the trick: it may
not be the most useful to you to simply follow other people in your industry; although you
can network that way quite productively. However, you may just want to go to those suggested
profiles and see who THEY are following and who is following them.
While none of these methods of finding followers on Twitter is fool proof or offers any
guarantee your business will increase, they are all great ways to find some interesting new
people to meet and potentially do business with in the future.
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