Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2013

Celebrity 'wannabe' spends £300 ($475 USD) to buy Twitter followers: Did he get a good deal?

The Sun today, covered a story of 19 year old, Kieran Miller of South Shields, Tyne and Wear.  The full details can be read on their website.

The shortened version goes a little something like this.

  • Miller isn't working right now.
  • Miller claims Job Seeker's Allowance ('Unemployment') from the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP).
  • Miller will, in his own words, do anything to be[come] famous.
  • To this end, he has 'purchased' [nearly] 300,000 followers on popular micro blogging site, Twitter.
  • He is quoted as saying “I’m not really looking for work. I put all my efforts into becoming famous.”
  • He is attracting quite a lot of negative attention for these actions and comments

Now, I have little interest in commenting, in detail, on Millers apparent flagrant disregard for the agreement he has with the DWP (to be actively seeking work); that is between him, his conscience and his local Jobcentre Plus.

What does interest me, is that he thinks buying followers on Twitter is a useful way to spend £300 (regardless of where/how he got that money).

There's a reason why you're able to get this many accounts to follow you on Twitter, and it's because they're useless, dead, fake, spam and otherwise pointless accounts that will not engage with your account.

Your reach is therefore not going to be increased, so I'm sorry Kieran, but you've just spanked £300 on not a whole lot.

A quick glance at Miller's Klout score will show him at a somewhat average 45.  Certainly not where you'd expect an account with hundred's of thousands of excited followers.

In fact, you know what would have been a more productive way to spend that money?  Book some time with a Social Media consultant who could have given you much better advice on how to build your on-line presence.  Chances are, it would not involved the purchasing of Twitter (or any other network) followers.

I feel for Miller; I mean, who doesn't want to be famous, right?

But, want to be famous for something good.  Do something positive, make a difference, actively seek work and do something creative.  Because honestly, what the world needs right now, is not another 'Big Brother style' celebrity.
So, my advice to anyone else thinking about buying a short-cut into highly popular social media is, don't.  There's many ways you can build your presence, make your content reach further and engage more people and I guarantee you that none of these ways include dealing with these shady and 'illegal' (as far as Twitter's T&Cs are concerned) practises.
"Using or promoting third-party sites that claim to get you more followers (such as follower trains, sites promising "more followers fast," or any other site that offers to automatically add followers to your account)" 
The above passage is taken from https://support.twitter.com/articles/18311-the-twitter-rules under the category of "Spam" which heads -
"Spam: You may not use the Twitter service for the purpose of spamming anyone. What constitutes “spamming” will evolve as we respond to new tricks and tactics by spammers. Some of the factors that we take into account when determining what conduct is considered to be spamming are:"
Come have a chat with me, next time Kieran; I'll steer you in the right direction.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Twitter Vs. Facebook Vs. Google Buzz

The battle of the networks continues; the only thing I think we can all agree on is that MySpace never really had a look in.

Now I've been a big fan of Google Buzz from its inception and though I have a great desire to see it succeed, I have a horrible feeling that it's lacking something.  Much the same way as Facebook is fundamentally lacking in its core purpose; social networking.

Perhaps a more apt label would be "Friend Networking"?  Come to think of it, maybe MySpace had it right, maybe these places are exactly that, "a place for friends".

Surely the whole point of Social Networking is to network...socially.  Buzz links you in with your current contacts, friends, family, colleagues etc. Facebook, similarly is a place where you're encouraged to engage with people after answering the question "do you know this person?".

So, are we 'networking', or are we 'staying in touch'?  Are the two even that far apart?

Conversely, Twitter is all about meeting new people.  Anyone who's been on Twitter for a while will be familiar with the #FollowFriday (#FF) concept, a Friday tradition where you have the opportunity to recommend an account (or accounts) that you follow, to your followers.

Of course, you don't have to pay any attention to a recommendation, but if you are looking to broaden your circle, it can be a great way to do so; someone you follow (who presumably you enjoy following) is recommending them, so there's a very good chance that you'll enjoy their ramblings too.

So, are these networks really in competition?  Perhaps in reality, they simply serve different purposes.

For now, I use Google Buzz to stay up to date with folks that are a little more on the forefront of Social Media; but will that really be the case going forward?  How long will it be until a new site is launched (Google Me is just around the corner), will that then become the 'cool corner'?

As time goes on, I lose patience with Facebook; their recent launch of Facebook Places left me yet again arguing with some faceless moron in "Facebook User Operations" explaining that I had in actual fact attached the information they had requested; this to me, really just sums up their attitude towards everything.

If the whole Social Network thing really were a race, where would you place your bet, is there a clear winner, or are you hedging your bets and sticking with them all?