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May 1, 2009 9:14 AM PDT

Lesson learned: #FollowFriday is a two-way street

by Don Reisinger
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It's #FollowFriday on Twitter, which means people will be updating their streams today with lists of users they think others should follow. Usually, the tweets say something like this: "#FollowFriday: @donreisinger @rafe @josh @caro @stshank"

Follow Fridays are a good time to add new people to your Twitter list, or promote the contributors you like the best. But what we really all want to know is this: How do I get included in Follow Friday notes? I did some research to see how a user could capitalize on Follow Friday to increase their follower count. I tried a handful of ideas. Some worked, others didn't. Here's what I found:

Idea 1: Beg
I decided begging would be the first option in trying to be added to Follow Friday tweets. I thought my followers would pity me and add me to their lists, thus exposing me to a whole new group of people.

It backfired. After updating my Twitter stream, many of my followers responded angrily, saying I was missing the point of Follow Friday. Others simply made fun of me. I didn't add a single follower.

Result: No change to follower count.

Idea 2: Insult Follow Friday
What better way to ingratiate yourself with Twitter followers than to insult them for being a part of a "Twitter scam"?

I updated my stream with discussions on why Follow Friday was a joke. I told my followers they shouldn't be engaging in such activity. I even told them that I didn't want to be on any lists because it was so dumb.

After three tweets and five minutes of keeping up with this ploy, it became abundantly clear that my Twitter insults weren't adding any followers to my list. In fact, I lost about 10 followers in that time. Most chastised me for not recognizing the value of Follow Friday. Others put it more succinctly by calling me a jerk. It wasn't a smart move.

Result: Follower count decline.

Idea 3: Praise Follow Friday
I decided that changing my tack would be in my best interests. I was losing followers by insulting Follow Friday, so saying how wonderful it was would certainly help me add followers, right?

Nope.

I told my followers that Follow Friday was an ideal way to meet new people. I explained to them that this special Twitter day would help them find great information. I even told them that Follow Friday was my favorite Twitter day because I was exposed to so many wonderful people.

Some followers said they agreed with what I had to say. But the vast majority of people were sickened by my overabundant joy. I didn't lose any followers by extolling the virtues of Follow Friday, but I didn't gain any either. Consider praising Follow Friday a waste of your time.

Result: No change to follower count.

Idea 4: Create #FollowFriday lists
One Friday, I decided to update my stream with lists of people worth following. I told my followers that these people were "cool" and "awesome." I explained to them that following them would help improve their Twitter experience. I picked the people on my list carefully, ensuring that no matter what, my followers would be happy to follow those on my lists.

The number of followers I added after creating those lists was nominal. All day Friday, I only added 10 new followers. I thought that by creating lists, I'd be a part of the community, give something back, and maybe (just maybe) that community would return the favor. It didn't happen. But, at least I added some new followers.

Result: Some gain in followers

Idea 5: Create lists of people who put me on their lists
I knew I was on to something when I created those lists. But I also knew that I had so much more potential.

So I gambled and decided that whoever would add me to their #FollowFriday list, I'd add them too. I waited to be added to some lists. Once I had enough people to create my own, I did just that. It took some time, but once my followers realized what I was doing, more added me to their Follow Friday tweets than ever before.

It was only a matter of time after that when my follower count started jumping. In the first hour, I added 100 new followers. I did it for a few more hours and added about 200 followers in that span. It worked beautifully.

Result: A big gain in followers

Lesson learned
What did we learn from this experiment? Simple: when your followers see a potential benefit in doing something, they will do it. If they don't, they won't.

So, don't waste your time begging for help without promising something yourself. Twitter is a community of social barter. Bring something of value to the table and you can get a lot back. In other words, to get followers, recommend followers.

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has written about everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Don is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and posts at The Digital Home. He is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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by -Oneota- May 1, 2009 9:52 AM PDT
Idea 6: Don't use Twitter at all and use your time for something more valuable.<br /><br />Result: More free time and personal happiness.
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by tomws May 1, 2009 11:54 AM PDT
+1
by gsimmonsonca May 1, 2009 10:43 AM PDT
Thanks for sharing Don... Good post.
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by xpose May 1, 2009 10:50 AM PDT
#followdon , screw followfriday!<br /><br />He was even able to get his friends twitter accounts in the article. I am sure they are very happy with you.
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by stigmattaman May 1, 2009 12:57 PM PDT
You're a silly human being Don.
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by TmDowling May 1, 2009 2:11 PM PDT
There are plenty of twitter ****** out there who only care about the number of followers they have, and who will return-follow anyone who follows them. Such a strategy isn't conducive to a meaningful use of or contribution to the twittersphere. By approaching #FollowFriday in the same spirit, you got added to follow lists, and may even have gained followers, but if those followers are discriminating they'll unfollow you when they discover that you weren't recommended on the basis of anything they care about. That may leave you with a long list of followers, but not followers whose opinions anyone else would respect.<br /><br />You get recommended by real people, people who truly appreciate your tweets and believe their community of tweeps will benefit from following you, by providing value to the tweet-stream.
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by TmDowling May 1, 2009 2:15 PM PDT
who'da thunk a common but not obscene synonym for prostitute would get 'cleaned up'? Wonder if the word itself will, too. If so, the censors leave the reader thinking what I wrote was something truly naughty, which it wasn't -- only insulting.
by nSeika May 5, 2009 1:36 AM PDT
"but once my followers realized what I was doing, more added me to their Follow Friday tweets than ever before." <br /> <br />So they only follow in hope of getting recommended (and exposed to more potential followers) and could care less about what you're actually talking of.
by hymanroth May 3, 2009 11:47 AM PDT
Very good!<br /><br />So good in fact that if you take a peak at my Twitter Client Demo, I'll take at look at yours... [ http://lmframework.com/page.php?id=vd_twig_short_1 ]
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