Is Twitter Going Down?

Community Topic(s):

Keywords: e20, AIIM, Collboration, Twitter, angry birds, Social Business, Facebook

Current Rating:
(0 ratings)

While one bird singing at a distance is relaxing, a thousand angry birds chirping at your ears at the same time is definitely not fun!

Angry Birds

 

 

 

 

In theory a great concept to simplify communication and collaboration.  Just 140 characters each.  You either have to know how to convey your message in a very concise way or don’t even start.  This is Nirvana for all extremely busy people in the world.

However, the creators of Twitter underestimated the potential of humankind to explore it in a negative way.  But let me start with the positive developments, which are many and may stick for good:

  • It was never so simple to tag a subject and filter by it.  Hash tags are just a great concept.
  • It was never so fast to get a response for an issue or question.  Post it and if you created a relevant network, you’ll have a good answer extremely quickly.
  • Therapy was never so cheap.  Just open yourself to the world.  With so little time and few characters, your tweet will get lost so quickly it may never be seen by anyone.
  • It was never so personal.  People were amazed to start receiving celebrity tweets, directly from their hands and brains (questionable), at the exact time they were thinking about it.  And in some cases, few lucky mortals would even receive a reply.
  • It was never so easy to have conversations during a seminar and exchange ideas, without disrupting the presenter, creating an extremely valuable parallel set of knowledge.  Better yet, without even being physically close to anyone.  Twitter has become the official way to whisper during live events.

I’ve stayed away from Twitter for about a week for personal reasons.  I may have missed some interesting things but there was never intent to try to catch up.  Then, for some time I thought: why should I go back there?  Should I just delete my accounts — yes, I have 3 for different purposes — and forget about it?

The reason I thought that way is because there is too much noise to be able to filter what is really relevant.  And because of that, many people are actually giving up Twitter.

Like any new thing, there is euphoria and then accommodation.  Twitter as well as Facebook and other social networking solutions are at the highest point of euphoria.  What will start now is accommodation, where people who already learned the pros and cons of such capabilities will adjust behavior.  This is when quality replaces quantity.  Massive clean-up, filtering and focus on relevance will take place.  Following multiple people will only occur if you don’t care about what they say.  Machine-like spitting tweets will actually make you lose followers.

The answer is yes, microblogging in general is going down.  Not completely though.  Just to a level where quality returns.  It’s past the time people could get away tweeting like actual thoughtless birds.  While one bird singing at a distance is relaxing, a thousand angry birds chirping at your ears at the same time is definitely not fun!

Click HERE for more!

 

--- Vinicius da Costa is Associate Director, Collaboration and Social Media Solutions at Kraft Foods. This text represents his personal opinion and does not represent the views of Kraft Foods, Inc.
Report

Rate Post

You need to log in to rate blog posts. Click here to login.

Add a Comment

You need to log in to post messages. Click here to login.

Comments

Good Bye

It could soar even higher...


Interestingly, I viewed your "positive developments" as a list of the very reasons that keep most people away from Twitter! I agree we're at an inflexion point, but if things proceed the way I think they should, we may see a dramatic increase in Twitter subscribers as the noise subsides and quality replaces quantity. It may go down in the short term, but it should ultimately go up as people realize its value as a utility. For more of my thoughts on Twitter, you may want to check out a blog post I wrote that has really resonated with folks. It's entitled "Unlucky 13: Twitter Worst Practices for Rookies (and Others) to Avoid" and can be accessed via http://tiny.cc/SMinOrgsTwitterPost. Courtney Hunt Founder, Social Media in Organizations (SMinOrgs) Community
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply
Vinicius da Costa

New trends will shake the space

Thanks for taking the time sharing another perspective Courtney. I love the potential of Twitter. I believe users will initiate a cleanup process to focus on quality. It's already happening people come less often because they have a hard time to identify something of value.

We will also see an increase in the integration solutions for different social networking capabilities. While individual solutions attend different needs, from the user's standpoint having to go to multiple places everyday is not practical.

Another trend is the increase of enterprise solutions for social collaboration and social networking. This is the place where I believe the next growth wave is.
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply

I don't think its going down

As a society that uses it, we constantly find new ways for its use. For many, and its not one of your list, it is a way to get news and share news instantly. Instead of blaring my phone up with those holiday txt messages, I can now blast the world Happy Cinco di Mayo and not worry about someone's phone going off in an important meeting for a non-important text message. Twitter is really group texting, even if we do not see it / use our phones for it. Texting itself has evolved.
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply
Vinicius da Costa

Agree, but...

...you can only get a real value from this if it doesn't get lost within hundreds of other tweets. That's why I believe, for any benefit to become a reality, users will have to focus on quality rather than quantity.

Thanks for the perspective Andrea. This only makes the content richer.
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply

Daniel Antion

I Might Have Agreed if not for Lists

Before Twitter created Lists, I might have even hoped that Twitter would go down. One of the first things I did was to create my Daily list, the people I actually want to listen to on Twitter. I move people in and out of that list from time to time, but it never has many more than 40 people on it. I periodically look at the broader timeline, I sometimes follow events by their hashtag, and I check other lists when I am interested in specific topics, but on a day-to-day basis, my Twitter apps are defaulted to show me my Daily list. Otherwise, it becomes noise.
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply
Vinicius da Costa

Great best practice for Twitter

This is definitely a great way to reduce the noise and focus on quality. This reduces also the political issues of unfollowing someone you care about but who is not a great tweeter. We can keep those connections while not really listening to them.

But most of the time we keep connections because we want to have more followers to listen to us, which is a valid strategy as well. Specially when a business or service provider uses Twitter as a marketing, customer relationship and communication tool.

Thanks Daniel. Great point.
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply

Brad Salomons

Twitter as Search

There will always be those who "drink from the fire-hose" as it were, wrt to Twitter, but from my own perspective Twitter has really become more of a social, crowd-sourced search engine. Sure, it is disguised as a social networking site. Sure it is dressed as a stream of seemingly disconnected thoughts strung onto the web by millions of tweeters. But when one stops trying to "keep up" with Twitter (you wouldn't try to keep up with Google would you?) and approaches it with the same information-seeking mentality as one would approach any search engine -- but instead a search engine for up-to-the-minute glimpses into the thoughts, idea, feelings, opinions, and (here’s the important part) actual observations of a vast and mobile network of human beings -- it's got a seemingly more solid, long-term future ahead of it.
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply
Vinicius da Costa

I like it!

This is indeed a great perspective Brad, which helped me looking at the capability from a different point of view. Thanks for that.

However, I still insist the quality will be an issue, which search engines are already trying to resolve with intelligent algorithms and feedback from the network of human beings. This is something Twitter lacks. In many cases we still have to manually search relevant and valuable posts even when we filter by #hashtags or search. Maybe they should think about a "like" option and prioritize results by that! What do you think?
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply

Randy Moeller

Twits tweeting is a long term issue

Sheen had the most followers ever. I think that sums it up in favor of chirping noise. Like the Internet, folks who want to find quality will and manage it from there. The rest will keep flipping porn and gambling sites as no. 1 & 2 for visits or eagerly wait for the next Sheen tweet on who he woke up next to. Humans are human.
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply
Vinicius da Costa

Questionable taste to pick what's good.

This is another advantage of the social space. It's self-regulate and the power is at the hands of the information consumers. With e-mail your most powerful filtering tool is junk it. In the social space followers can make a bold statement about the quality by unfollowing. Good stuff will remain, bad stuff disappears. The challenge like you said is that humans sometimes have a very questionable taste to pick what's good.
Report
Was this helpful? Yes No
Reply

This post and comment(s) reflect the personal perspectives of community members, and not necessarily those of their employers or of AIIM International