Patricia Stoltey

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So What Do I Think of Twitter Now?

July 8, 2009 By: Patricia

I jumped into the Twitter frenzy around the middle of April and three days later wrote Seven Things I Learned About Twitter in the First Three Days. Granted, my experience was limited, but there were some things I figured out pretty fast. The biggest thing: anyone prone to communication addiction should stay away.

Being a glutton for punishment, however, I persevered, promising to let everyone know if Twitter helps build blog traffic. The answer is yes. Since I don’t tweet about every single blog post, and I can see the number of visits to my blog each day, I can tell that even two tweets a day about that day’s post will bring more visitors.

A side note: On the days I also post a notice to any of the Yahoo! Groups I belong to (six at the moment, plus one mystery lovers’ list), the number of visits shoots way up.

Here are the other things I like about Twitter:

1. The people I follow tweet links to excellent articles or blog posts that I never would have found on my own.

2. I can follow breaking news and local weather warnings before that information is available on television or radio.

3. Some of my favorite bloggers tweet when they post, which saves me looking up the list from my own blog.

4. I’ve found a few public figures to follow. I choose the ones who are funny, who seem to tell the truth (although who can really know), and who tweet useful information. I don’t think I follow any movie stars, although I understand Elizabeth Taylor is in Twitter World now.

5. I have the option of unfollowing and/or blocking folks who spew venom, spend all their time selling things I don’t want to buy, or tweet so often I can’t find messages from anyone else.

6. The mind tidbits (tweets) fascinate me. It’s like people-watching. Only different. The kind of things writers do to get story ideas.

7. I’ll give you a couple of interesting Twitter people to follow if you want to smile: @GayleGresham @wordsbybob. For good information: @problogger @Twitter_Tips. And, of course, me @PStoltey. I try to provide a little of both.

Can you add to my Twitter “smile” list, or to the “information” list?

More from my site

  • A to Z Challenge: I is for Impossible (and Greg Iles and Iron Ties by Ann Parker)A to Z Challenge: I is for Impossible (and Greg Iles and Iron Ties by Ann Parker)
  • Developing Your Belief System by Kenneth W. HarmonDeveloping Your Belief System by Kenneth W. Harmon
  • The Value of a SmileThe Value of a Smile
  • Three Authors, Three Questions at Chiseled in RockThree Authors, Three Questions at Chiseled in Rock
  • And the Winner is……And the Winner is……
  • Springtime in Northern ColoradoSpringtime in Northern Colorado

Category: Uncategorized

Comments

  1. Terry Odell says

    July 9, 2009 at 4:49 am

    Nope. Not convinced yet. So far, all I can think is, “Why would I care.” My Facebook page gets inundated with Twitter feeds that are absolutely meaningless – conversations between strangers.

    I prefer quality to quantity, and Twitter seems to be a bigger time suck than it would be worth.

  2. Jane Kennedy Sutton says

    July 8, 2009 at 2:15 pm

    I still don’t use twitter like I should. I think I wasn’t picky enough in the beginning. I need to unfollow some folks so I can more easily find the updates I’m interested in. Still, like you, I have run across some very useful articles I’d never found any other way.

  3. Marvin D Wilson says

    July 8, 2009 at 1:11 pm

    I went through a similar learning/familiarity curve with twitter. Takes a while to see what the worth of all the fuss & time is about but it’s definitely not only a great networking tool but also a wealth of info can be gotten there.

    The Old Silly

  4. alexisgrant says

    July 8, 2009 at 12:22 pm

    Glad you’re getting the hang of it!

    In the last month or so, I’ve made several publishing connections, authors who have offered to recommend me to their agent! Maybe Twitter will help me get published ๐Ÿ™‚

  5. Karen Walker says

    July 8, 2009 at 11:52 am

    Oh,I’m still on the fence about Twitter. I seem to get tweets from the same folks each day and they don’t mean anything to me.
    Karen

  6. Galen Kindley--Author says

    July 8, 2009 at 10:38 am

    Well, I’ve made some friends on twitter, but, I’m pretty selective about those I follow. For example, if someone I don’t know follows me…that’s the case about 100 percent of the time…I look at the frequency and quality of their tweets, I also visit their web site. If the information they’re providing looks useful—and not too frequent. I’ll usually follow back…at least as a trial. But, if I start getting, “I just fed the cat.” Updates every 5 minutes, well, our relationship doesn’t last. My take: Twitter is good if…if you’re following the right folks.

    Best regards, Galen
    Imagineering Fiction Blog

  7. Elizabeth Spann Craig says

    July 8, 2009 at 9:51 am

    Patricia, I was one of those people who was really doubtful about Twitter at first…and now I’m one of those people who spends too much time on it!

    Thanks for the Twitter links…I’ll check them out.

    Elizabeth
    Mystery Writing is Murder

  8. The Practical Preserver says

    July 8, 2009 at 9:37 am

    I tweet when I post. (Just had a funny thought. 5 years ago nobody would have had a clue what that sentence meant.) Twitter’s upgrade has made it more difficult to unfollow people. Used to be able to click on “Following” and it told you if that person was follow you. Made it easy to unfollow simply by clicking. Now I need to find out how to do this again with their new format.

  9. Carolyn Yalin says

    July 8, 2009 at 9:09 am

    Thanks for this. I just started using Twitter and often forget to Tweet ๐Ÿ™‚
    I’m going to start following those you suggested.

Meet Patricia

I read, I write, I blog, and sometimes I do the laundry and cook. My 2014 novel, Dead Wrong, was a finalist in the thriller category of the 2015 Colorado Book Awards. Wishing Caswell Dead (Five Star/Cengage, December 20, 2017) is a historical mystery set in 1830s Illinois in the fictitious Village of Sangamon. The novel was a finalist for the 2018 Colorado Book Awards for General Fiction. Read Moreโ€ฆ

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