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    Can you judge a book by its cover? - Meg Fowler, Jim Storer, Aaron Strout, and Tim Walker

    The title of this post asks, “can you judge a book by its cover?” You can when the “cover” is the front page of someone’s Twitter account and you’re judging whether to follow them. That page contains an avatar image (usually the person’s photo), a short biography (no more than 160 characters long), a link to the person’s home page (or company, blog, LinkedIn profile, etc.), and — crucially — the most recent 20 tweets that the person has sent. You can click through to see more tweets in batches of 20, but if you follow many people on Twitter, doing that often takes more time than it’s worth.

    And there’s the rub: if you want more people to follow you on Twitter, you have very little time to make a good first impression on them . . . but many ways that you could string landmines of the “Don’t Follow Me” variety across their path.

    Recently four heavy Twitter users — Meg Fowler, Jim Storer, Aaron Strout, and Tim Walker — got to talking (on Twitter, of course) about the poisoned words, phrases, and other cues that automatically signal “Don’t Follow” for them. The end result was that the four decided to bang out a joint blog post that talked about best practices in not following based on not liking the proverbial “cover” put forth by fellow tweeters. Here’s what we came up with:

    Tim Walker’s “not follow” strategy
    • “MLM” (multi-level marketing). I’m sure that somewhere, some nice person who does MLM could explain to me how it’s not a veiled Ponzi scheme. Until then . . . you’ll pardon me if I continue to think of it as “a veiled Ponzi scheme.” No thanks.
    • Tweets that include “buy followers” or “hundreds of followers” or anything else in the “get lotsa followers!” genre. I try hard to earn new followers by being relevant, interesting, funny, and personable. The idea that you would buy yours in bulk — much less promote that process — disgusts me.
    • Political ig’nance. I follow people of all political stripes, from all over the world. But if you have to wear your politics on your sleeve, and if your politics are of the knee-jerk type (again, regardless of your leanings), I just can’t stand to follow you.
    • Calling yourself a “visionary” or “expert” or (shudder) “guru.” It’s much better to say you’re a “marketing veteran” or “experienced sales leader” or whatever. Let *others* call you a visionary.
    Meg Fowler’s “not follow” strategy (cross-posted on “friend” Gradon Tripp’s blog)
    Love it, Tim.
    • For me, it’s more about “who do I need to block around here?” Because no one likes to be spammed. So if I see any of this in your bio and/or first 20 tweets…
    • Requests to “follow me back!”
    • Promotion of affiliate programs
    • Actual affiliate links as the link in your bio
    • Any mention of followers (“I can get you followers!” “Get thousands of followers!” “5,000 followers and growing!” “This program will get you followers overnight!”)
    • “Make money online (from home, easily, doing practically nothing, overnight, with my system, etc.)”
    • Promises to “generate” anything: money, cash, followers, success, creeping rashes…
    • Promotion of tooth whitening programs (Seriously?)
    • A mention of your Twitter Grader Rank
    • Mention of “Sponsored Tweets”
    • Mention of your “Twitter eBook FREE JUST CLICK HERE”
    • Presence of “69″ in name (or “Shelly Ryan” as your name… poor, poor real @ShellyRyan)
    • Rockstar/Maven/diva/coach/thought leader/guru/expert/pro/maverick
    • Porn-star-like attributes in avatar or links (Nudity, actual sexual acts, clear intent to seduce me with something other than words)
    • Requests to click through to “see your profile”
    • Googly-eyed “Twitter Basic” avatar (upload a photo, PLEASE)
    • @ing people the same link OVER AND OVER

    Jim Storer’s“not follow” strategy

    I’ve never auto-followed anyone, which at this point means I’ve vetted (to varying degrees) nearly 3,500 people. Until recently you had to click through to a person’s/bots profile page to get the skinny on who they are. Now some of that info is available in the new follower email, but what I look for is the same.

    • Following to Follower % (you’re following dramatically more people than follow you) – If this is too imbalanced there’s something fishy and I’m not biting.
    • # of Updates to Followers/Following #’s – In the last six months I’ve started to see a lot of people with 5k+ followers/following and less than 100 updates. That suggests you’re just using a program to rack up followers and that just wrong (IMHO). I’m not interested in being another notch on your bedpost.
    • If your bio includes any of the following I’m not interested: “more followers”, “make money”, “expert” (at anything), “MLM” and everything else Tim, Meg and Aaron came up with. I trust them.
    • If the words you chose to describe your pursuits in your biography are overly loquacious I will not be inclined to follow you back. Get real… use real words and tell me who you are.
    • If you haven’t written anything in your bio and/or you haven’t added a photo, I’m not following you.
    • If you have zero updates how am I supposed to know what you’re going to talk about? I’m not listening until you start talking.
    • If your last few updates are repetitive and too self-promoting, I’m not interested in seeing that day to day. I already saw what you have to say when I was checking out your profile.
    Aaron Strout’s “not follow” strategy

     

    The upside and downside of going last is that 1) all the good stuff has been said but 2) it leaves less stuff for me to say. Out of the list above, I’m probably the most lenient of the four. Like Jim, I’ve never auto-followed (but have considered it) so that means that I’ve hand followed back nearly 9,000 people (yup, that’s a lot). However, I have a few basic rules that I follow:
    • In most cases (not all), I like seeing a picture. If someone is obviously a n00b who looks to be figuring things out, I’ll cut ‘em some slack. Otherwise, they don’t make the cut.
    • I need a bio. Is it too much to tell me what you do?
    • I also need a tweet or two (unless they are a friend of mine and then of course they get the free hall pass)
    • No “get rich fast, affiliate or “let me sell you some shit” in the bio or last few tweets.”
    • One I get stuck on a lot is the news feed/blog title posts. These really depend on follow ratio and quality of the tweets. It also is up to my mood. If I’m hand following 40-50 people, these folks usually make it in. If it’s 4-5, not so much.
    • I will follow ANYONE from Austin (pornos excepted)
    • Oh yeah, I don’t follow webcam girls or known pornos.
    So what’s your strategy? Who do you or don’t you follow? Share your tips in the comments below.
    photo credit: library.cornell.edu
    via jimstorer.com

     

    • 24 January 2010
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    over 2 years ago Brent Logan responded:
    Brent Logan
    This is how I (@blogan) choose not to follow someone. People I don’t follow include:

    People who immediately send an autorespond tweet telling me how to get more followers
    People who have a single tweet with a link they’re trying to promote
    People who follow and then immediately unfollow me
    People with “SEO” in their Twitter bio and spammers in general
    People who tweet solely politics (especially those I disagree with); life’s too short

    I post this info on my Twitter landing page: http://blogan.net/blog/about-blogan/twitter/

    over 2 years ago Wesley Faulkner responded:
    Wesley Faulkner
    Good deal Brent. I agree with all of it. I do sometimes follow people that have different political views than myself. I sometimes get to respond to the tough questions and that helps to reinforce my beliefs, or makes me think a little harder and find the true facts.
    over 2 years ago Brent Logan responded:
    Brent Logan
    Being a conservative in Oregon, I get plenty of exposure to opposing viewpoints. I have no problem with that.

    I have no problem exposing myself to opposing viewpoints. Twitter's typically not a good place to engage, though. Blog comments or e-mail work better. They have sufficient length to engage. Twitter just facilitates drive-by tweeting of opposing views, something I've given up for 2010. http://blogan.net/blog/2009/12/30/my-social-media-new-years-resolutions/

    I need to take a closer look at the lists above. Good advice. :-)

    over 2 years ago Tommy Landry responded:
    Tommy Landry
    Good stuff in here, and much of the same stuff I look for. My top list includes:
    1. Following-to-follower ratio: I prefer they have at least as many followers as they are following, or close to it. That's why I follow no celebrities. Otherwise, they won't even notice if you tweet them.
    2. Number of tweets and time they've been on Twitter: Only have 8 tweets? Following 900 people? Have only 5 followers of your own? I probably won't do it.
    3. Snake Oil Sales people: Ditto to what everyone else said; porn, MLM, "gurus", etc.
    4. Feeds with no interaction: If you want me to follow, say "Hi". Talk to me. Curse me out if you don't like me. Show me you're a real person. No interaction = no follow.
    5. Message me with pure gibberish: I followed a guy last week who seemed interesting enough. Then he @'d me something that made zero sense. He also sent it to three other tweeps back-to-back. So I unfollowed. Can't talk to someone without a grasp on reality.
    6. People who calls out unfollows publicly: Seriously dude? You're mad at someone for deciding not to follow you? And you think being rude to them will make your other followers want to stick around. Yeah, right. BTW, the gibberish guy called me out...twice!
    7. People who follow/unfollow: If I choose to follow you back, engage with me. It's pretty simple.

    Nice blog post,
    Tommy

    over 2 years ago Jim Storer responded:
    Jim Storer
    Thanks for the mention, but in fairness Tim wrote the intro and we all cross-posted what he wrote. So you should probably give Tim title credit on this one.

    I'm still blown away that people actually use tools to amass lots of followers before they've even found their voice. If someone has a 10-1 followers to tweet ratio it's a dead giveaway that something's fishy.

    over 2 years ago Wesley Faulkner responded:
    Wesley Faulkner
    Tim, and everyone involved is credited in the title now. Thanks Jim for letting me know.
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