All A Tweet About Twitter

0
groks

Either you think it's god gift to the mediaverse or you just don't get it, but the digerati is all alight about Twitter. The user-driven newswire, still in its mere infancy, has attracted everyone from Brittany Spears to your grandmother. Now that Oprah has signed on, and the apocalyptic unification of celebs and one-finger-wonders on a 24/7 tweet binge has passed, we have to ask is this the final nail in the coffin of net banality.

When it first arrived and backyard bloggers evolved into tweeter-stars, Twitter beget and sometimes answered the question, can you really tell us anything useful, nonetheless interesting, in 140 characters or less. 5 million users later we're still not entirely sure because, after all, who's making any money? After signing up for free and perusing Twitter's ad free pages, one immediately joins the guessing game of how Twitter spins a dime from their sky rocketing user ship. The Twitterverse's decentralized news desk capitalizes on the pure human desire to share information, thoughts and ideas. Basic literacy and an ethernet connection is all that's required, and thus it has turned out to be the ultimate telegraph for the masses. And like it's earlier forerunner, it's a game changer.

Now post-twittical mass with a retweet button at the bottom of every blog post, we are in the throes of an unprecedented viral media plague. And while retweets can give any website its 15 minutes, people are still unable to pin a definitive business model on it. Thus we return once again to the foundational question of what is this all good for.

The beauty of Twitter, to the chagrin of all the online marketeers, is your answer and mine won't be the same, nor should it be. Most of us are finding a use for this public newswire in a myriad of ways. Its simplicity has allowed it to be so easily tailored to fit individual needs. My own adoption of Twitter has exposed me to a lot of great blogs and news about subjects I am interested in from people I'm interested in. And more to the point, like minds tweet together in a very timely fashion. Twitter for me is an easy, fluid mix of the personal, random and helpful. However, I was exposed to Twitter a year back by a software development company who used Twitter to get real-time feedback for beta products they were developing. They basically had a free virtual focus group who gave them instant and concise feedback.

The truth is Twitter is no cash cow, and those who approach Twitter purely to milk it as a promotional tool will find the bucket runs dry. Equally,Twitter will be unsustainable for those simply looking to supplement their Facebook friends with a slew of Twitter followers; those simply updating things like what they had for lunch are likely to kill off any longterm interest for both themselves and their audience. Content is and has always been king, and people wise up to widget peddlers and time wasters pretty quick. After the hype subsides and the drop off tallied, Twitter will remain because it asks for something genuine, something you can't find in your wallet or a text book, something you need not be an artist, coder or writer to accomplish and something only you can deliver. Twitter asks for your content contribution, a small idea, link, suggestion, a morsel of creativity or information, and it asks it in the most undemanding way. You have a 140 character outlet to share a piece of your mind and business model or no that's worth a hell of a lot more than 2 cents.

Comments

Thanks, man

I never really saw twitter that way, but yeah ... makes sense. In a way it's kind of like how when blogs came out, and people were like, "Who the hell wants to read about some chick's cat, or what some jackass thinks of what he read in the paper?" But ultimately of course it's not about those things ... funny that I got that when blogs came out and missed it completely with twitter ... shows how old I'm getting I guess (sort of the way when I found out about pharm parties my eyes kind of bugged out and "Kids do that these days!?")

Think I'll get me a twitter account....

good point

@isamizdat,
i think you raise some good points. twitter is not for everyone. neither facebook or evolver. these are content creation options, just like a beautifully tended garden, a serenade with a guitar and/or a conversation with your neighbor. i am simply enjoying this low barrier technology's ability to open the gate for further contributions from people too far way to enjoy the above mentioned items with. following people of like mind, they can give me links to their inspirations, tweet ideas and plain old check in to remind me that there are a lot of interesting people and things out there.

@psychegram,
if you get a twitter account look me up as Clarity_J . twitter takes some time to figure out how this tool serves you best. i find what has helped me is when i find a person i am interested in following, because they post stuff i like, i check out who they are following and so on, using the dominoe effect to find people to follow.

clarityjones.com

Hahaha, that's gotta be some

Hahaha, that's gotta be some kind of telepathy because you gave me exactly the information I was coming to this page to request!

See you on twitter!

Found you!

Looking forward to this experiment ... I've got a friend who will either laugh herself silly or get all, 'see, I told you so!' the moment she finds out I've got a twitter account.

To Twitter or Not To Twitter . . .

Been wondering if Twitter was for me. Thanks Clarity.

For me, I'll find value in following people I like who may lead me to related things of interest, provocative thoughts, suggestions and links. Not so interested in knowing all about everyone's daily grind of trivia, with some exceptions of course. Hoping to find some things that are fun, relevant and inspirational for me. Thanks for pushing me over the precipice Clarity! I'm now a Twitter nubie. OMG.

Syndicate content

"Banish the word 'struggle' from your attitude and your vocabulary. All that we do now must be done in a sacred manner and in celebration. We are the ones we have been waiting for." — Hopi elders

Sponsored by