StockTwitsYesterday I spoke about two websites which let you use Twitter to find a domain name or a job. Dntwits and TweetLancers were both good ideas but they just weren’t developed properly and seemed like they hadn’t been finished.

StockTwits, on the other hand, is a Twitter service which does seem to live up to it’s potential. The site is best described as a ‘Twitter for Traders’ and works in the same way as Twitter in most ways. For example, it doesn’t ask you ‘What you are doing?’, it asks you ‘What are you trading?’.

You can add stocks you want to monitor to your portfolio then monitor updates related to your portfolio on the home page. Alternatively, you can see all updates or just the ones from friends.

If you do a lot of trading then I recommend checking StockTwits out :)


StockTwits

Link : StockTwits

read full article →

TwitRankI found another Twitter ranking site today called TwitRank. The premise is very simple : You enter your Twitter username and then a rank out of 10 is calculated from the number of people you follow and the number of people following you.

I got 6 out of 10, which doesn’t sound too good! There isn’t a TwitRank button to place on your blog so after using it once, I fail to see why you would use it again but I thought I would share it with you all anyways :)

TwitRank

Link : TwitRank

read full article →

DNtwitsDNtwits is a cool Twitter service which lets you market domain names you are selling. In their own words “DNtwits is a free service that allows users to list the domain names they want to buy or sell by simply tweeting from their Twitter account”.

I think DNtwits is a great idea but it seems far from finished. For starters, there doesn’t seem to be a lot of people using it and without an audience, you would be as well posting your domain name for sale at a popular domain name forum like DNForum.

Secondly, domain ads don’t have any datestamps attached to them so you never know if a domain advertisement was placed today or two months ago. It is a good concept though it needs more features.

DNtwits

The owners of DNtwits also run TweetLancers. Run using the same script, TweetLancers is a freelance service which lets you use Twitter to post jobs. Unfortunately, it suffers from the same problems that DNtwits does.

Link : DNtwits

read full article →

John Chow posted about a great script the other day called SpreadTweet. It was designed for Twitter addicts who work in offices and want to keep using Twitter without getting caught.

SpreadSheet is a Desktop Twitter client disguised as a spreadsheet. You can choose to have the prgoram resemble any of the following programs :

  • Office OSX
  • Office 2003 (Windows)
  • Office 2007 (Windows)

The script uses Adobe Air but for those who don’t want to install the script to their computer, there is also a web based version of the script.

SpreadTweet

I’m sure those of you who work in an office will find this script incredibly useful :)

Link : SpreadTweet

read full article →

One of the most effective ways of growing your Twitter followers list is to follow other people. I myself follow most people who follow me as long as they are not bots, have nothing in common with me or do nothing but post links to their own sites. Other than that, I am happy to follow most people, and I’m sure many other Twitter users do the same.

A few days ago I noticed my followers count drop a little. I wasn’t too sure why but I checked FriendOrFollow and saw that many of the people who were not following me in return had only recently started following me. One name which I noticed was @ShoeMoney, a blogger in a similar niche as me who added me and then unfollowed me a week or so later.

Turns out that many people use this tactic i.e. they follow lots of people, wait a week or so and then secretly unfollow them. I signed up to Qwitter a long time ago, a service which lets you know when someone unfollows you, however recently it hasn’t been sending updates when someone unfollows so I didn’t notice this happening at first.

Getting unfollowed in this manner doesn’t really bother me as I regularly unfollow those who do this however it got me thinking about why people do this, why are they so obcessed with getting their follower count high but keeping their follow count low?

What influences your decision to follow people on Twitter?

Is Twitter a One Way Street?

I read a few comments about this on some online forums and the general concensus is that some people are doing this to try and give the impression that they are an authority. The idea is that when the average user sees someone who is not following many people but has lots of followers then they must have something important to say. But is that the case?

When you see a user who has lots of followers but isn’t following many people themselves, do you follow them because they must have something important to say? Personally, I do the opposite. I don’t mind someone who doesn’t follow every single person back as there are a lot of people I don’t follow in return.

However, when I see someone with thousands of followers only following a hundred or so back, I see someone who isn’t worth following. I see someone who doesn’t care what anyone else has to say. Now I understand that the more people you follow, the more your Twitter home page becomes full of tweets and it makes following the people you want to follow harder (Clearly Twitter need to follow Tweetdecks example and add a group function on Twitter!) but surely Twitter isn’t just a one way street? Surely a big part of Twitter is interacting with new people?

Celebrities are notorious for not following many people back. Take Ashton Kutcher for example, he currently has over 1.35 million followers but follows less than one hundred people himself, nearly all of which are celebrities. Perhaps that’s why people are trying to keep their follow number down, perhaps a low follow count does demonstrate influence within the Twitter community and shows that you are too busy to follow anyone else.

Again, I’m perhaps being a little harsh with my view because as I stated, the more people you follow, the more updates you get and some people don’t want to clutter their Twitter home page up. What do you think, does Twitter become harder to manage when you add more followers?

The Flip Side

Up until now I have talked about Twitter users with low follow/follower ratios and whether it influences your decision to follow them. But there is a different group of people out there : Twitter users who follow more people than follows them back.

If a low follow/follower ratio implies that the user has something important to say then perhaps the opposite is true, perhaps it shows that the person is not worth following.

I must admit that when I see a person following 800 people but only has 100 followers themselves, I rarely follow them because I get the impression that nearly all of those who followed only did so because they were returning the favour. Is it wrong to think like this?

A few days ago Twitter introduced a few new restrictions on how many people users can follow on Twitter. I am pleased that these new rules have been introduced because it will make it harder for people to grow their list to silly levels using bots and spam tactics (but it won’t stop them!).

  • First of all they have introduced a maximum following limit of 2,000 people or 110% of the number of followers you have. So someone who has 500 followers can follow 2,000 people but someone with 3,000 followers can follow a maximum of 3,300 people.
  • Secondly, they have introduced a maximum daily follow limit of 1,000 people. So if someone like Ashton Kutcher does feel like following back some of the people that follows him, he will have to do it at a rate of 1,000 people per day.

With these new rules in place there will be less users with high follow/follower ratios though with a limit of 2,000 follows there will still be a lot of Twitter users out there who follow more people than follows them back.

What do you think : Do you actively follow Twitter users who follow more people than follows them back?

Overview

There are many factors which quickly influence my decision on whether I should follow someone or not but the follow to follow ratio is something I always pay attention to. I also look at the number of followers in total the user has, their background image, their avatar and their bio.

Does the follow to follower ratio influence your decision on following someone on Twitter?

:)

read full article →

Twitter doesn’t have a great function for seeing who is following you and who isn’t ( certainly not for those who have a lot of followers). If you would like to review who you are following and who is following back, you might find Your Twitter Karma useful.

It quickly displays a list of all the people you are following and those who are following you too.

Your Twitter Karma

A good alternative to this site is FriendOrFollow. Your Link Karma shows bigger avatars though I like how FriendOrFollow seperates those who are following you to those are not following you back. Both sites essentially do the same thing so which is best is really down to personal opinion. :)

Link : Your Twitter Karma

read full article →
Twitter Survival GuideBlog Themes Club

About the Author

Kevin MuldoonJames Hakim is a webmaster, blogger and self confessed gadget geek! He owns numerous websites on the net including the popular Twitter Scripts.

Having signed up to Twitter in April 2008, he didn't really become active on it until early 2009. Since then he has been a Twitter fantatic!

To stay up to date with James please follow him @Twiter_Scripts on twitter or visit his company.
  • What I'm Doing...

    • Exciting thing's are going to be happening soon, watch this space! 2009-10-14
    • We have now completed our backlog of custom orders, we're now ready to work on new custom scripts so contact us!! 2009-10-12
    • Testing this out 2009-09-26
    • More updates...

Recent Readers