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Portrait of an ideal Twitter user

Twitter user profileIt’s been already established that Twitter is a great channel to form relationships, network and connect. Moreover, it is a great tool bloggers have to promote their writings. If your followers read the stories you tweet about, retweet them to their own connections, it translates into more traffic, more comments and leads for the business part of your blog.

While some get great results when using Twitter, others fail to see any positive outcome from their 140 character writing endeavor. Who are these users that get all the attention and added benefits of traffic, always more followers and business success? Let’s see how ideal Twitter users look like!

They are not self-absorbed

Twitter users with steady crowds reading fervently their every update don’t think the world revolves around them. They don’t exclusively tweet their own stuff, urging others to worship them. The only such users that actually are successful are the stars and wannabe stars in the entertainment world, and they are the exception to the general rule – narcissism does not work in social media!

They value conversations

Twitter is not just broadcasting your own products and services. It’s about engaging in meaningful conversations with your network. Be it to find out how they’ve been, to advise them or share some useful piece of news, popular Twitter users talk a lot with their followers.

They are the first to offer something

Power users know that the examples they set will most likely be followed. If they engage their online friends, if they answer their questions, if they retweet their stories, the same will happen to them. You cannot simply show up on Twitter, post a few updates and expect everyone to drop everything and concentrate on you. Most of them follow hundreds of people and need to notice you first. What better way to discover you than a reply or a retweet with a valuable comment.

They respect their followers’ interests

If you’re an expert in a field, have an unusual hobby that you tweet about, have a niche blog, your followers most likely read your tweets for that very reason. You can mix it up with personal updates, funny videos and other such casual conversations, but most of your tweets will be about your topic of interest, the one generally described in your Twitter bio.

If people have followed you because you initially posted a lot of great resources for small business and you switch to ranting about unimportant, unrelated details and only write a useful tweet once a week, they are bound to leave.

In conclusion, the recipe for success is not complicated, at least not in theory. All you have to do to be a successful Twitter user is to get to know the community you are about to join, find out what their interests and preferences are, then join the conversation and try to help whenever you can. The rest is mostly based on reciprocity and being nice.

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This article has 10 comments

  • Sounds like me! :D I’m just kidding.

  • I admit it takes time and dedication, but Stefan, it’s not that hard to achieve. Yet, time… time is what we all seem to lack. :)

  • Tell me about it, I sometimes wish there was “time in a jar” for sale at the market. :)

  • Well, the problem with tweeting is that it gets lost in the noise. The iconic bird on tweeter is so aptly symbolic.

  • Jun, have some faith. If done well, your tweets will end up in exclusive lists that Twitter users follow and read with more attention. Those are the users you target, the ones that can be your loyal followers and promoters at the same time.

  • That sounds about right! A great twitter account user is someone who is willing to share and communicate well with his/her stream, it’s all about sharing meaningful conversations.

  • Great article! It’s more of valuing and improving quality relationship rather than the quantity. Once quality relationship is established then the others follow.

  • Hey Alex,

    Great Post alex. Some great tips there.
    Thanks for sharing this great Post.

    ~Dev

  • Thank you kindly for sharing this article.

    Common sense I guess, but nonetheless, a good reminder!

    Peace,
    Gabriella ;-)

  • It does take time to build a relationship but
    it takes time no matter what you do. Twitter is
    a little different because the tweets only last so long unless they are retweeted. One thing to do is get Klout and see what people with a high Klout score do. Bear in mind though if you are self promoting it doesn’t matter which method of social media you use you are not going to get to far.

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  1. Who to follow on Twitter - Blogsessive