Subtle but Very Important Twitter Tips and Techniques You Should Know (cause no one will tell you)
Shameless Plug: If you're at Blogworld Expo 2010 this week, please join me at my talk on Friday afternoon. Details at http://hnsl.mn/blogworldsuckless. If you liked this post, you'll find 32 even more tips for blogging at my talk "32 Ways to Make Your Blog Suck Less."
If you're new to Twitter, do check out my two other articles:
- How To Twitter - First Steps and a Twitter Glossary - This will give you all the basic terms, and a few obscure ones, and a step by step plan on how to get started.
- Twitter: Let the Information Wash Over You - This is the "river of crap" post that includes guidelines for getting the most out of Twitter so you don't give up if you try to read every tweet. ;)
There's a few behaviors about Twitter that are subtle, but important. For some of my examples I'll be making up tweets and timelines to protect the innocent.
Let's start with the most difficult to understand concept. It's obvious once you grok it, but it's a huge point of confusion to a LOT of people, especially new folks.
1. If your tweet starts with someone's @username, only that user and folks who follow both of you can will see the tweet in their timeline.
I wrote that sentence three times and it's still not 100% clear. Here's an example.
I'm @shanselman and I follow @robconery and @haacked. If @robconery tweets this:
@shanselman is the best. I love him so much. Tacos for all!
Rob thinks he's being nice, announcing something to all his Twitter followers. But in fact, Twitter says that a tweet that starts with a @username is not a @mention, it's a @reply.
Only those people who follow @robconery and @shanselman will see that tweet. In other words, the potential audience for that tweet is the intersection of our followers, NOT all of @robconery's followers.
Example: If @haacked follows @robconery, but not @shanselman, that tweet will NOT show up in @haacked's timeline.
When you want to reply to someone and have everyone see it, add a . or an R, or basically anything in front of their name. That'll make the tweet a @mention of them, rather than a @reply, then everyone in your timeline will see it.
2. Keep the Reply Chain unbroken and reap the benefits
What's the difference between these two tweets?
@shanselman nah, let's go to see The Town instead?
@shanselman nah, let's go to see The Town instead?
Nothing obvious, just by looking at them alone, right? But if you look closer in your Twitter client, or click the tweet on the Twitter website, they might differ by their inclusion of a hidden data point called "in reply to," like:
@shanselman nah, let's go to see The Town instead?
10/12/2010 10:00am in reply to @shanselman
It doesn't just know that you're replying to @shanselman, but also the status id (the unique number) of the exact tweet. This data is SO useful because it allows you (your twitter client, in fact) to follow the conversation thread as far back as there's data for it. Without that hidden metadata, you're just looking at tweets out of context.
While both tweets are replies, since they start with a @username, only one includes that extra data because I actually clicked "reply" in either my Twitter Client or from the website. It's the act of clicking reply that causes that extra data to be added. If you just start typing a reply or copy paste a user name, your client or the twitter site will likely consider your tweet a fresh tweet.
On the Twitter website, in the New Twitter interface, tweets that have the reply to meta data have a little "conversation bubble" next to the tweet. If you click a tweet with this icon, you'll get the full conversation thread. In this image, two of the tweets are "proper replies," and the other two are "mentions."
What does this mean for you? Try to keep the reply chain unbroken by using the Reply button in your Twitter client or within the Twitter website. Not only will your followers appreciate it, but you will at some future date when looking back on your tweets and wondering what the heck you were talking about.
3. Know about the advanced features of Url Shorteners
There's a lot of URL shorteners out there like http://bit.ly and now Twitter's http://t.co. One of the most interesting things about Bit.ly is its ability to collect lots of statistics.
But did you know that you can take any bit.ly link, even ones that aren't yours and see their stats? Just add a plus after the URL. Like this crucial piece of breaking news I tweeted last week. "LA Area freeway clogged by burning yam truck." at http://bit.ly/aEu3Gj. You can visit http://bit.ly/aEu3Gj+ (see the plus?) and get all these great stats.
This trick even works with custom Bitly.Pro domains like my very own URL shortener, http://hnsl.mn. For example, check the stats on my diabetes video http://hnsl.mn/iamdiabetic with stats at http://hnsl.mn/iamdiabetic+.
Not only do I get clicks, but I also get aggregate clicks via other bit.ly links pointing to the same URL. There's also a realtime chart at the bottom as well as recent (last week or so) conversations on Twitter that mention the link. Again, the takeaway here is that you can do with this anyone's link, not just yours.
4. Silence your Retweet friendly friends without unfollowing them
Have a friend who retweets WAY to much and fills your timeline with crap, but you still love them and don't want to un-follow? You can remove retweets on a per-user basis from a user's full profile.
For example, if I didn't want retweets from my friend Travis (just an example, he's a lovely guy) then I could visit his profile and silence his noisy RTs (retweets).
Enjoy.
About Scott
Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.
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It will prepopulate:
@shanselman how do I reply so that it not only keeps the conversation history but ALSO allows everyone to see my reply?
Thanks in advance,
Jason
Question: Does this feature exist, or am I thinking of a great new groundbreaking feature? I wish I could know in advance where a shrunken URL is going to take me. I wish I could "hover over" or in some other way see that http://bit.ly/samplesample is going to take me to EveryComputerVirusNOTKnownToMankind.com.
I didn't know about 1 and 2. Not in that detail.
BTW, what do you think about google's new goo.gl URL shortner?
The QR codes at bit.ly are awesome though :)
http://lifehacker.com/5511793/make-qr-codes-in-a-jiffy-with-googl
NickG136 Nicholas Gallicchio
Email:Romolo1123@AOL.com
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Cheers,
Ruben
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