Why I Don’t Follow Your Nonprofit or You on Twitter

I have a lover affair with Twitter. But it has too end. So sorry, Twitter. I give you way too much time and attention. I have a business to build and can’t give you more time than you deserve.

Of course, Twitter isn’t the real problem. It’s not where I hang out that’s the issue. It’s all the people I meet there with their yummy conversations, insights and links.

I’ve learned a ton on Twitter, and I get most of my blog post ideas from Twitter too. But sometimes I feel like I’m looking through the dictionary for just the right word when what I really need is a thesaurus. In short, I think I’m using Twitter the wrong way.

The first step in my rehabilitation was to do something Chris Brogan did back in September: I unfollowed everyone on Twitter.

I have to admit I felt liberated as I unfollowed people. But then I felt anxious, and only felt better as I added people back. Phew.

I had a criteria in mind as I hit that follow button.

  • I followed friends.
  • I followed people that were leaders in cause marketing and social media.
  • I followed people that I communicate with via direct message.
  • I followed people that tweet awesome stuff – even if we never talk.
  • I followed people that tweet a lot.
  • I followed people that showed up in my “Mentions” column on Tweetdeck
  • I followed people whose tweets I “favorite” for later reading.

I didn’t follow back people that

  • I felt obligated to follow. Yep, few of them still left.
  • I followed in another way – on Facebook, LinkedIn, RSS – that is a better way to communicate with them.
  • Weren’t people. I try not to follow brand handles…or anyone with an animal for an avatar. If the best picture of you is your cat, I already know too much about you.
  • Didn’t tweet a lot.The last factor has always been an important one for me. If you don’t tweet a lot you won’t show up in my stream and I won’t think to further investigate your tweets. I’ve noticed that the first thing I look at in someone’s Twitter profile is how many tweets they have.

You might be asking why I don’t use Twitter lists more. I never have. It doesn’t seem to make sense. You’re either following someone or you’re not. They either have the goods you want or they don’t. I don’t need another list to scroll through or to ignore because I don’t want to appear impolite.

I did create a couple more keyword columns to monitor topics of interest. I’ve always had columns for “cause marketing”, “#causemarketing”, and, since I started writing QR Codes for Dummies, “qr codes”. I also added “nonprofit mobile”, and for this week “#12ntc” and “innogive” so I can follow the Nonprofit Technology Conference in San Francisco.

The hazard of the latter two columns is I’m finding some great new Twitter followers. I’m trying to tread carefully.

One thing my experiment had in common with Brogan’s was the surprising reaction some people had to being unfollowed. It made me laugh!

 

 

I even got a few emails from people asking if I was “Ok.”

Yeah, I’m okay. Now scram. I’m busy….Um, but tweet me later, OK?

CauseTalk Radio Ep07: Automated Giving: Super Strategy or Slacktivism?

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

In this episode of Cause Talk Radio, Megan and I chat with John Ludlow, Chief Strategy Officer for Snoball.com about automated giving. We learn more about the Snoball platform, pontificate about why embedded giving is the wave of the future, dismiss claims of slacktivism, and speculate about ways that automated giving can become a cause marketer’s dream.

I also suggest best practices for phone greetings…be sure to stay tuned all the way to the end of the episode for these valuable gems!

I generally don’t recommend QR codes for web pages. You might as well use a plain old hyperlink. But if you’re planning to listen to CauseTalk Radio on the go, scan the above code with your mobile device and you’ll always have a direct link to our podcasts on iTunes.

Resources

Snoball

Cause Marketing Forum’s Annual Conference

QR Codes for Dummies is Coming! FREE Webinar Next Week

“The future of nonprofit marketing is connecting with supporters where they are and when they care. QR Codes are a link to that future.”

I’m really excited about my new book, QR Codes for Dummies. I’ll finish the final edits this week and the book will be out in June.

To celebrate finishing the book, I’m throwing a party of sorts over at CharityHowTo.com, the #1 web site for nonprofit webinars on every topic you can think of – sponsorship, auctions, Facebook, cause marketing, etc.

On April 4th at 1pm I’m offering a FREE webinar on QR Codes for nonprofits. During this hour-long webinar you’ll learn:

  • What is a QR Code?
  • How do I scan a QR Code and make my own
  • Why QR Codes are Important to your Nonprofit
  • What are 5 ways that nonprofits, both small and large, are using QR codes successfully
  • Why QR Codes are the start of a mobile revolution that you need to join now!

Register for this FREE Webinar

At the end of the webinar, you’ll be invited to a 90 minute premium webinar at CharityHowTo.com on April 11th at a savings of 20% off the list price of $69.99. This webinar will dig even deeper into QR Code marketing. I’ll show you how to make and measure them, and how to use them to deepen your nonprofit’s connection with stakeholders.

Included with this premium webinar is a handy guide that will take you step by step through QR Code marketing.

But even if you don’t enroll in the premium webinar, the FREE webinar will give you a great start on QR Code marketing.

Want to learn more about QR Codes? Click on the QR Codes for Dummies cover, or if you are on the go, scan the QR Code on the cover with your smartphone, to watch a video of me talking about my new favorite topic: two-dimensional barcodes!

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