BLOG

This is SmallBizPod's blog dedicated to practical advice, news and insight for small business owners, entrepreneurs, and anyone needing help starting a business. You can read all sections of the blog from here or go straight to the topic you prefer by clicking the appropriate channel above.

Sponsors

Freeform Dynamics sponsors SmallBizPod's blog


Twitter may be stressed, but don’t ignore it

Twitter has been mentioned a few times in SmallBizPod a few times during the past year. It’s a web service that allows you to post short messages about what you’re doing at any moment. These can be picked up on computers and mobile phones. In itself, Tweeting sounds totally insane. As I’ve said before, “Who cares?” But, oddly, the answer is often quite a few people. Like many web services, it has issues but I’ll come to them later.

Some people I know have thousands of ‘followers’. I have a mere 237. But then again my posts are sparse and, to my mind, fairly uninteresting. But, I hang in there. As do lots of people I know. I’m dead fussy about who I follow, but I do dip into the lives of 54 other people. We stay ‘tuned in’ to each other without making a big deal of it.

The Twitter service is a bit like a school playground - you see a lot of people you know and you notice who they hang out with and what they get up to. It’s not that you’re particularly focused on them. You’d be busy doing your own thing. But there’s a sense of community awareness and, if something happens - a fight breaks out, someone does something good or starts an interesting game - you might attack, defend, praise or join in the game.

It’s about relationships. You’re there for the people you care about and you hope they’re there for you. Other people you don’t know, also watch (assuming you’ve given permission - default is ‘yes’) and if they’re interested in your life, they might make contact.

It’s a totally un-businesslike process, yet it creates channels of help, support and communication. If you regularly rummage your ‘followers’ list, you may find people with the same interests as you. If you stick up a plea for help, there’s a good chance someone will chip in. If you share something useful with others - a good YouTube movie or blog post, perhaps - they will quietly recognise you as a goodsource. Relationships form inductively. And these often translate into real life encounters when a mutual benefit is sensed.

At 140 letters per ‘post’, you’re forced to keep things terse. And, depending how many people you follow, you probably can’t catch everything that’s said. Nor would you want to. Think of it as a river of stuff and you watch it flow by from time to time and occasionally take a dip.

So what’s the downside? Well, recently, the service has taken two major hits on its performance. Both were caused by technical problems - one caused a traffic overload and, no sooner had that been fixed than one of the databases collapsed. With a free service, complaining isn’t really an option. You hope it will recover and you vow not to depend on it too much.

Thus far, people I know who’ve suffered these disruptions have looked on more in sorrow than in anger, which is very fortunate for the (small) Twitter team. Rumours abound that it has received $15M of series B funding which, if true, will hopefully help it find a way out of its technical difficulties.

If you have an internet connection then I think it would be a good idea to sign up and find a few interesting people to follow. And just watch what’s going on. They will mention others in their network, so click on them too. Soon, you will find out who interests you and who doesn’t - unfollow people you regard as timewasters. You might find yourself getting involved. Or not. Just don’t give up too quickly (as I did a long time ago, but rejoined) or feel that you have to read everything (as I did, which was a prime reason for giving up.)

It doesn’t matter whether you like Twitter or not. And it doesn’t matter whether Twitter survives or not. Just participating will give you an insight to how millions of people per month are networking with each other. And, just like the other new ways of communicating - instant messaging, blogging, forums and Second Life - these are the invisible networks which subvert official hierarchies and communication channels.

Dealing with them by ignoring them really isn’t a smart option.

Related Posts

Alibaba.com sponsors SmallBizPod small business podcast

Sponsor SmallBizPod - the podcast for small business and entrepreneurs



4 Comments »

Subscribe to SmallBizPod feedRSS feed for these commments. SmallBizPod trackbackTrackBack address

    I’m amazed that so many people have bought into Twitter. A social network is only as good as the people that use it and Twitter has absolutely exploded, I too keep up intermittently but am still not convinced. I think you have to put an awful lot of time into Twitter monitoring tweets and tweeting yourself to yield any benefits.

    Comment by John Peden — 27 May 2008 #

    I guess it depends what ‘benefits’ you seek. If it’s belonging, knowing what sort of things are going on, what your trusted contacts are up to, it’s not bad.

    I’ve found the trick is to keep the number of people you follow to those you really care about.

    Comment by David Tebbutt — 27 May 2008 #

    Quite apart from the social networking side, we also see Twitter as a great form of digital plumbing. For instance we route messages from several sensor type devices and CRON monitoring programmes to private Twitter feeds so that we can keep an eye on some of the systems that run our business. The ability to have all “ambient” information routed into one place is a great way to reduce email traffic.

    Comment by David Burden — 29 May 2008 #

    … and your Twitter ID is???

    I read this, and thought “I’ll follow him”, then couldn’t work out how to.

    I am MarkHarrisonUK on Twitter :-)

    Comment by Mark Harrison — 30 May 2008 #

Leave a comment

XHTML: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Alibaba.com sponsors SmallBizPod small business podcast

Podcasts

Subscribe to small business podcast on iTunes

Click on one of the blue triangles below on the right to listen to inspirational interviews with entrepreneurs from the SmallBizPod archive.

SmallBizPod #75 - starting a business in a downturn

SmallBizPod #75 - starting a business in a downturn

An interview with David Lester of publishing company Crimson on starting a new business. Includes practical advice, tips, and why startups and recessions mix well.

play small business podcast now
SmallBizPod #53 - Podcast with Jennifer Irvine of Pure Package

SmallBizPod #53 - Podcast with Jennifer Irvine of Pure Package

Remarkable entrepreneur, Jennifer Irvine of The Pure Package, talks about her gourmet food business, overcoming adversity, the power of PR and celebrity clients.

play small business podcast now
SmallBizPod #68 - Rachel Elnaugh Interview

SmallBizPod #68 - Rachel Elnaugh Interview

A podcast interview with celebrity entrepreneur, Rachel Elnaugh, on business failure and success, attraction, the entrepreneurial sex-drive, women in business and the well-being sector.

play small business podcast now
SmallBizPod #60 - Inspirational business planning

SmallBizPod #60 - Inspirational business planning

Become passionate about your business planning and learn how to do it right with Tim Berry and Alan Gleeson of Palo Alto software.

play small business podcast now

Small Business Podcast RSS FeedWhat is this? Small Business Podcast RSS FeedMore business podcasts

Recent

Comments
  • David Tebbutt: Cheers Simon. That one’s been popular with BrainStorm users for years. It’s pretty relaxed...
  • Simon JOnes: I’m using FreeMind, which is Java-based,cross-platform and free. It really helps when trying to...
  • Dan Wilson: @ed from builaskill. Only one correction: I am not a vzaar employee or working for them. eBay and Amazon...
  • Adaptiv Media: Great read, exposing eBay’s dastardly new(ish) policies. Since killing off its digital...
  • Alex Bellinger: Thanks Martyn, the cashflow issue hadn’t occurred to me and exactly why your insight here is so...
  • Martyn: >> Non-registered Agreed that their inputs will fall by 2% but they may have to cut their prices to...
  • Alex Bellinger: Hi Martyn Indirectly, I guess, assuming it helps to stimulate spending. Alex P.S. Forgot to say, many...
  • Martyn: Alex How does a cut in VAT help small business? Martyn
  • Ed: Good old Dan The ex-eBay employee is always a good read (no, seriously, he is), and always ready to plug his...
  • Sherry Borzo: Thanks for the silver lining news and ha, ha, on the blowing bit. Nothing like tooting the horn for...

Topics
  • Archives
    Contact

    Other Info

    Check out other information and ways to subscribe for free to this blog

    • Add to Google
    • Subscribe in NewsGator Online
    • Subscribe in Bloglines
    • Add SmallBizPod - small business blog to Newsburst from CNET News.com
    • Small Business Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory

    Small Business Trends review

    Creative Commons License

    © Copyright BizPod Media Ltd, 2005-2008