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Read/Write Twitter: Twitter’s real value is up to you

by Jorge Escobar on April 29, 2009

I wanted to wait until all the smoke cleared and the hype blown away.

It all started when one of my tweeps asked me in a DM:

digital-femme

Carmen, sorry for the late reply. I think I don’t mind.

You see, Twitter is the platform, it’s not the the object. I do think people understand Twitter as different things, depending on what they intend to use it for.

I DVR’d the Oprah Twitter episode and saw it a week after it aired. My wife and I thought it didn’t anything to explain Twitter to her audience (I would show you the clip, but Oprah took it down from YouTube, but there’s sort of a written summary of the episode here.) There was a video clip of about two minutes trying to explain what Twitter was, but failed totally doing it. It’s apparent neither Oprah nor their team understood what Twitter was at the time of the episode taping. I also thought that Oprah and her panel ganged up on Evan Williams.

The three highlights of the segment were:

  • Ashton Kutcher has a gazillion followers and Ashton is happy because his fans don’t have to rely on the tabloids to know what’s happening with him and Demi.
  • They had a huge concern about personality hacking on Twitter. Oprah and their guests were hung up on trying to answer “How do I know this Twitter user is the real blah.” Even Williams couldn’t or didn’t have time to answer this (the answer is “the community will tell you”).
  • You can find about news on Twitter (they made the example of the Hudson Plane Crash).

Betty (my wife) was getting more annoyed as the segment wore on. She is not a techie by any means, and doesn’t use Twitter, but has a concept of what I use it for. Oprah’s audience didn’t get a chance to hear it. I’m sure a million people signed up for Twitter after the Oprah interview but I’m also sure most of them have already left the service.

To those who are still with us, let me explain something to you. Twitter’s real value is not reading what celebrities say (the read part), it’s the networking part (the read/write part).

Hutch Carpenter says in a post:

If you get caught up in the celebrity and start following a lot of them, then you probably are changing your Twitter experience. As long as you’re happy…

But what’s the use of reading what broadcasters say to you and pray that they reply to one of your @ tweets? You might as well watch Access Hollywood or TMZ; it will fulfill more of your need to know about your favorite celebrities than subscribing to their Twitter feed.

By the way, as Allen Stern pointsOprah hasn’t tweeted for almost a week now. Talk about still not understanding it.

As time goes on, I’ve seen how Twitter has been adopted, slowly but surely, by broadcast media and its celebrities. They know it’s a cheap medium to keep people tuned in at all times to what they have to say. If you don’t mind getting rammed by their digital broadcast (we used the term “the 25th hour broadcast” when we talked about the Radio Station websites back in Netmio) then Twitter is good for you. There are many Web 2.0 celebrities who use the medium in this “Read only” format. I won’t lay out names, you know who they are.

In an informal study, I did an average of the following count of the last 10 users who I’ve had replies from. The average number of followers these people whom I constantly talk with was 373. None of the users have more than 3,000 friends.

The Twitter experience you want to get is totally up to you. Make sure that who you follow is someone that not only auto-follows you, but who you can have a conversation with. The rest can be safely ditched; you won’t miss a thing.

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Twitter’s Value Goes Down as More People Use It

February 20, 2009
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This might be something that @ev or @jack aren’t expecting. But I think it could potentially transform what users get out of Twitter, and ultimately, the future of Twitter itself.

And in some ways it might be exactly the opposite of what happens with other web businesses.

I’m starting to think that as more people use Twitter, the less valuable it becomes.

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Eavesdropping Great Minds

February 16, 2009

Some people are trying to explain what Twitter is.

This is my shot at it.

Imagine being able to sneak in to a room where the most brilliant scientists, marketers, newsmakers are talking to each other.

This is what Twitter allows you to do. You’re not breaking and entering, and it’s free.

Just make sure you follow people that are smarter than you. Do not follow everyone that follows you.

A lot of these people are spammers and noisemakers. What they don’t get is that Twitter is not a marketing tool. It’s not a broadcast tool.

Twitter is the ultimate smoking room without the smoking.

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Each Social Platform has its own Use

February 10, 2009
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Last week I did a major reorganization of my social sites. I had started to add people randomly to all my networks — Facebook, Twitter, FriendFeed — and lately I was getting a lot of noise and little return on each one of them.

I decided I had to set some rules.

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Use Social Media, Keep Your Customers Happy

November 25, 2008

I was really pissed. After trying to do some changes to my company’s DNS records, I ran into bureaucratic hell. I called, they opened a ticket. Two days later the ticket prompted me to call. After the call, I received an email about additional information. I was pissed, and I vented on Twitter…

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Let It Go, Twitter is Not Going To Die

July 29, 2008
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For the past few weeks there’s been talk of how Twitter is dead, how Twitter is going to die, or why Twitter must die. I think Twitter is just getting started.

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