Influence: The Holy Grail of Twitter

March 13, 2009 by Ryan 

Wife: Have you got anything without spam?
Waitress: Well, there’s spam egg sausage and spam, that’s not got much spam in it. 
Wife: I don’t want ANY spam! 
Man: Why can’t she have egg bacon spam and sausage? 
Wife: THAT’S got spam in it! 
Man: Hasn’t got as much spam in it as spam egg sausage and spam, has it? 
Vikings: Spam spam spam spam…
Wife: Could you do the egg bacon spam and sausage without the spam then? 
Waitress: Urgghh! 
Wife: What do you mean ‘Urgghh’? I don’t like spam!

-Monty Python’s Spam Skit

I have read, listened to, and watched at least a dozen people talk about “how to game Twitter” to get large numbers of followers.  What flabbergasts me is they walk you through the steps to explode your followers, while in the same breath talk about how disingenuous and spammy the strategy is!

The Holy Grail of Twitter

Marketers are drooling over Twitter and other social media sites because of the potential they have to drive sales! They see Twitter accounts with massive follower numbers and their eyes turn into dollar signs.  It makes sense why they see things that way.  On TV, you pay the most for advertising when there are the most viewers. In print, you pay the most for the publication with this highest circulation numbers. Same with the internet! You pay the most to advertise on the site with the highest traffic. These people bring their previous experience and assume that it’s only about eyeballs. 

I’m pretty sure Kami Huyse was in one of these discussions with me on BlogTalkRadio. She makes a great point

You can have thousands of followers and be completely unable to drive the traffic or interest that someone with only a few thousand followers can.

So why bother getting a bunch followers that could care less about who you are or what you do? Followers who in fact are only following you so that you will follow them.

What is the real Holy Grail of Twitter? It’s influence! Companies, entrepreneurs and marketers search far and wide trying to figure out how to obtain influence to grow their business. The problem is, with Twitter, having followers does not equal having influence! Kami agrees:

If your goal is to be truly influential, or to drive sales, interest and attention, then gaming is pointless. Having thousands, or hundreds of thousands, of followers will not ensure success on Twitter.

The Great Twitter Debate

Purists argue it’s not about the numbers, it’s about relationships. Meanwhile, everyone else still pursues building their numbers! I can see both sides. Rob McNealy puts it best in his Twitter Policy and Philosophy:

There is a debate in social networking about quality versus quantity of connections, followers and friends.  I think there is quality in quantity and therefore like to grow my online networks.  The more people I can connect with, the greater the content will be and more varied the prospective I learn from.

I generally follow everyone that follows me.  I agree with Rob that having more followers adds to the richness of the community and the discussion. Another personal reason I think people should follow back is the ability to Direct Message (DM) and make asides to individuals. Why pollute the Twitter-stream with comments or questions that would be better as DM’s?

I also genuinely want to connect with people! I review their profile. I click on their link. I read their tweets. I also make notes to myself of why I added them, and what I want to connect with them about with DM Notes.

My Twitter Influence Formula

Relationships matter. Numbers matter. But there is more that goes into the influence you have on Twitter. Here’s my attempt at a formula:

Followers ? Influence

Followers = Reach

Influence = Engagement x Followers

Your follower number is the reach that your message has and a multiplier for influence. If you only have 50 followers, it is harder to get your message out than if you have 5,000 followers. But where I think influence is really measured is in engagement:  How engaged are you with your followers? How do you quantify that? I may have gotten too into this but hopefully this makes sense:

Engagement = Interaction + Compliance

Interaction = Replies + DMs

Compliance = Clickthroughs + Retweets + Followfridays

Interaction is pretty easy: how much are you chatting with people? It’s a common criticism of Guy Kawasaki. Critics say he never interacts with his followers, he just pushes his Alltop content (even though I’ve seen him respond to friends of mine). I think it’s important to respond to every reply.

Next in my equation is “compliance.” Simply put, how often are you able to get people to do something! This is harder to track, but I have boiled it down to how often do people click on your links and how often do you get retweeted. I added how often are you mentioned in #followfriday. I definitely think #followfriday can get gimmicky, “I’ll mention you if you mention me,” but there is value there. When done sincerely, what is that really saying? It’s saying this person influences me! I try to limit my mentions and add comments as to why I am mentioning the people. Here’s an example (and a little shameless self-promotion):

@robert_brady: #followfriday @ryansmiller for doing social media right (ie learning, sharing and engaging)

Is there anything I am missing that contributes to a tweep’s influence?

UPDATE: Here are some great posts from others that I think go well with what I’ve written:

Twitter & the Law of Reciprocity

Person, Functional or Social: 3 Ways to Play on Twitter

Is “Twitter for business” ruining it for the rest of us?

Photo by andyrob

Never “Tweet” Alone

March 11, 2009 by Ryan 

           

Social Media Club, Salt Lake City: @intheblack, @jordanbrown,
@jyl_momif & @tmcconnon all checking if they are already
following each other. (Photo by @carysnowden)

You want to know how to use Twitter?

Read Never Eat Alone.

The book predates Twitter and probably most of social networking and is primarily based on old-school, business-card-passing networking, but it covers some of the most effective and overlooked strategies for new-school social networking.

I’m not going to draw all the parallels between the book and Twitter: partly because it would be very long, partly because my copy is currently lent out, and partly because you really should read the book! Instead, I’m going to use a few chapter headings as a framework for this discussion.

Chapter 1: Becoming a Member of the Club

I feel like I’ve moved to New York City or Silicon Valley, where the people I want to meet are right in my neighborhood. Now I live in a community where I mingle with likeminded individuals, all willing to share and help each other. I feel a buzz and an energy from my contacts on Twitter. How can you not get pumped when @garyvee tells you to “go out there and crush it!?” 

Take advantage of that new connectedness! Follow lots of people! Build a community!

Chapter 5: The Genius of Audacity

Twitter changes the access I have to major technology innovators, thought leaders, celebrities, writers & directors, atheletes, etc. But even though the big names are now a mere reply away, there is still hesitation to contact them.

Be bold! Be audacious! If there is someone out there you want to talk to, do it! You never know what kind of relationship you could start! I’ve seen business deals, joint ventures,mentoring and companies come out of Twitter connections. As The Big Aristotle said:

To all twitterers , if u c me n public come say hi, we r not the same we r from twitteronia, we connect

Chapter 11: Never Eat Alone

There are times when I am literally sitting up at night, way too late, wife is asleep, and I’m tweeting! One of the changing moments with Twitter for me was my first TweetUp. I was able to put faces to the Twitter IDs and tiny avatars. I was able to shake hands and laugh with people I knew through 140 character messages.

TweetUps bring life to Twitter. They bond you to new friends. They reintroduce the human aspect of social networking. Find one near you and go! Organize one yourself! Do it for a cause! Do it for fun!

Chapter 8: Take Names

If I meet someone or follow someone that poses a particular opportunity for me, it’s important that I track my interactions with that individual. One way is to add those details in DM Notes to yourself.

Chapter 2: Don’t Keep Score

Suddenly, these names aren’t just names anymore, they’re people. They’re friends and I help my friends. I have tried to make my mantra to help anyone and everyone I can. I want to connect people. I want to be a catalyst for success. And I try to do it without expectation. 

Call it the “Golden Rule.” Call it karma. Be generous and helpful. You don’t lose anything by doing it!

Chapter 27: Build It and They Will Come

Today Jessica Smith from JessicaKnows.com(@jessicaknows) was interviewed on BlogTalkRadio. She was the guest expert brought on demystify social media for a couple of uninitiated & “terrified” hosts. Jessica definitely understands the potential of Twitter and that it doesn’t come free:

“I think one of the biggest mistakes people make is the expectation of instant gratification…Social media is called social media because it requires a social investment.”

What other traditional networking tips apply to Twitter?