We’ve talked about Twitter
tips before. Everyone
knows not to use
all caps (really, you
shouldn’t do that anywhere),
but there are worse Twitter sins.
Seven, to be exact. These are things you
should never do or, if you have, stop doing
them immediately on Twitter.
- Location Bulletins
I’m on Foursquare but barely use it because,
surprise, I don’t like having everyone know
where I am all the time. With Twitter, I used
to have to announce my location, but now I
can turn on the geo-location feature or use
the Foursquare integration and have Twitter
do the work for me. Why would I ever want
to do this? We’ve all seen the stories about
people whose homes have been robbed
because, ostensibly, they announced on
Twitter that they were going on vacation.
Why turn yourself into a headline? - Quotes and Useless Advice
What is this Twitter fascination with posting
random quotes? Do we need someone
telling us that Bill Keane believes “A hug is like a boomerang—you get it back right
away”? Blech.
I also regularly see tweets with advice
and aphorisms from all sorts of people. People
have the Twitter soapbox, so they figure
they can hand out guidance. Unfortunately,
it almost always comes off sounding condescending.
Take this one from Confucius,
“To know is to know that you know nothing.
That is the meaning of true knowledge.” - Endless ReTweets
Please, do everyone a favor and don’t try
to include everyone who ever started the
tweet or ended up in the Twitter thread in
your retweet. It makes the tweet unreadable,
and you have virtually no characters
left. I know, everyone wants to give credit.
I try and do it, too, but I also limit the RT list
to two people, max. And sometimes, if I’m
pressed for characters, I’ll simply credit the
most recent Tweeter. Your followers will
appreciate this kind of discretion. - Nasty Comments
I’m no Twitter star, but I now have enough
followers to attract random people saying
particularly nasty or even just pointed things to me. I like, whenever possible, to
respond to them directly. Now, as is my
habit, I do not respond in the public stream,
because I think those random conversations
only tend to confuse everyone else
who is following you. The problem I run
into, though, is that these cowards operate
like the Enola Gay: They fly over my Twitter
stream, drop a bomb, and then quickly
move on. If they’re not following me, I can’t
direct-message them and engage. To put it
simply: Don’t say something nasty if you’re
too afraid to follow. - Out-of-Context Blather
The other day, someone starting tweeting
responses to a couple of my tweets, but
insisted on calling me Matt. The comments
were actually interesting, but since I’m not
Matt, I couldn’t figure out if I should respond
or not. Other times, I get tweets sent to
me that have no relationship to anything I
cover or am remotely interested in. There’s
no rhyme or reason to the tweet and usually
the Tweeter doesn’t respond when I ask
what they meant. Stay on message, people. - Direct-Message Spamming
I don’t know if these are Twitter robots or
multi-level-marketers (MLMs) trying to
hook another unsuspecting victim, but
there’s nothing more annoying than some one using the private—and somewhat
privileged—Direct Message channel to try
and get me to help them sell some random
piece of marketing or product garbage.
Please, I’m busy, my followers are busy, and
none of us has time for this. - Ignoring People
There are celebrities with over a million followers,
and I think they can be forgiven for
“ignoring people.” I follow a bunch myself,
and if you’re watching their Twitter mention
streams, you’ll notice how often they’re
hammered by people simply begging them
to notice, mention or follow them. I’m not
talking about these people. For most everyone
else with a few hundred or even a few
thousand followers, though, when people
ask you a question, you should do your best
to respond. This is good practice not just for
healthy Twitter relations, but it’s an almost
guaranteed way to get even more followers.
Those you respond to will usually recommend
you elsewhere.
Never do these seven things on Twitter—
except when you have to. Truth is, there are
exceptions to almost every rule here, but as
the saying goes, “Better safe than sorry.”
And, no, I won’t be posting that on Twitter.
Post via PC MAGAZINE – November 2010