I’ve been using Twitter for the better part of the year and for the most part, it’s been fun. With time, Twitter grew in significance and overtook email, IM, blogging, and photo-sharing as a principal means of communication and expression. I find there’s a certain elegance and challenge to expressing yourself in 140 characters or less and even more so when it takes 2 or 3 succint messages to complete your thoughts.
Recently, communicating on Twitter has gained additional importance as it’s helped me and my friends get things done, in real life.
When Permission Marketing meets the Cluetrain
I teach a class on Social Media at the University of Miami School of Communication. With the students, we spoke about getting some local bloggers to meet the class and talk about their experiences. After a quick tweet to local bloggers , @vicequeenmaria, @cgranier, @dearYvette and @Fanless expressed interest. Two weeks later, we enjoyed pizza and soft drinks over an excellent conversation on blogging and Twitter. Based on that discussion, a music blogger who I contacted through Facebook got started on Twitter as @bangthebox.
"Twitter is where Permission Marketing meets the Cluetrain Manifesto; you opt-in to a great conversation"-Alex de Carvalho
Could this meetup have been organized another way, say, through Facebook? Of course. But just sending a single message on Twitter and getting a quasi-immediate response from interested parties was easier and less of a commitment for all. Rather than having to opt-out by replying to a message from me in Facebook, local bloggers could opt-in by expressing their interest in the request I had sent.
To extend this principle further, when you follow someone, you are opting-in to get their tweets. When you participate in your friends’ timeline, you have opted-in to a great conversation with the people that you have chosen to follow. It can’t get more spam-free than this. This underscores a second principle, that "My social media is not your social media", which I’ll blog later.
Introductions
Another example occurred through direct, private messaging on Twitter. @technosailor contacted me to ask if I or someone I knew would be interested in guest writing on his blog, in Spanish. I recommended @cgranier and a fortnight later, they were collaborating. To be fair, the initial direct messages were through Twitter and the introduction was through email (I haven’t managed to get email completely out of my life, yet
And I think this earned me a round of drinks
Fundraising
The last example is perhaps the most significant, since it entails raising funds* for BarCampMiami in February 2008. I sent a quick tweet on how BarCamp was shaping up and six hours later had signed up an additional sponsor (not counting my own company). And ten minutes after that tweet, two more sponsors came on board, @hyku and @sass. I still need six more sponsors, which I’ll do in a more traditional way, but it was great to quickly get an initial set of sponsors "who get it" on board. I may try a fundraising request on Seesmic first before I contact some of the bigger local companies in Miami.
*Note: BarCampMiami sponsorship is a flat $250 per sponsor.
The Watercooler (Twittercooler?)
At the workplace, Twitter is slower to catch on. A couple of my colleagues are semi-active and we signal each other through Twitter, but I suspect my volume of tweets can be hard to keep up with unless they’ve grabbed my RSS feed. Even so, since most of it is time sensitive, tweets can lose context when read much later. But that’s what it’s like at the watercooler, "you had to be there".
And when I was there, I got breaking news on Twitter about the earthquake last week (the "twitterquake"), Brazil hosting the World Cup in 2014 and the Red Sox sweep, which occurred during the FOWA Miami Geek Dinner.
On a more daily basis, I get excellent link recommendation from @scobleslinkblog and others, a chance to meet up when travelling, as I did with @leahjones, @gapingvoid and @hyku in Chicago, getting questions answered, sending/receiving beta (and alpha) invites, for example, for Seesmic and for Mailplane, and just plain socializing.
You watercooler was never like this
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Great post, Alex. I was leading a session at the Austin Social Media Workshop yesterday and referenced Twitter as my “virtual water cooler.” The specific examples of how you’ve used Twitter are similar to mine. I have yet to find anything that comes close to dragging me away from Twitter; it’s been profoundly useful as well as enjoyable.
Good luck w/ BarCampMiami! I enjoyed getting to meet you at BlogOrlando and trust our paths will cross again at another conference.
Excellent post. While I sometimes find myself frustrated at the Twitter technology (time lag, downtime, etc), the benefits of being able to connect and communicate with people outside of my immediate circle outweighs all that. I currently have Twitter friends from Mexico, Argentina, UK, and all over the states. People I would otherwise never have “met” had it not been for Twitter.
Great thoughts, Alex. I was skeptical about Twitter at first, but when I learned how to use it in a practical and fun way, it became a catalyst. It’s especially important when you work in a rather reclusive way, so you NEED a virtual watercooler to stay in touch with people on a continual basis. I think seesmic is going to take this to the next level.
I agree, 140 characters is actually a great test in communication skills. It makes you think twice about what you’re going to say.
I think now that we all have some experience onTwitter and have figured out how it fits into our online activity it is definitely playing a bigger role in our lives.
What has me excited about this service, even in spite of all it’s quirks, is that it’s really what we have been talking about along now and that is “rss as email”
@conniereece with time we may find more uses for Twitter and we may get better at getting things done with it. I think that point will come when more of our friends start using it.
@balou I’ve also met people from all over and particularly from Brazil using Twitter. I look forward to our Tweetup coming up soon!
@vicequeenmaria you’ve really embraced Twitter and Seesmic and it’s great to see you building freindships on-line and off with these channels
@nicolau hopefully this will help cut out e-mail altogether
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