10 Reasons Not to Auto-Follow on Twitter
Yesterday I stopped following almost all of my Twitter users.
Why?
After thinking about this long and hard, I decided that auto-following people on Twitter is a waste of time.
Yes I realize that one of the best ways to quickly grow your follower count is to find other Twitter users in your niche and follow their followers hoping for a follow-back. It’s a great strategy for building up your follower count and it definitely works.
It works so well in fact that I was able to take a test account I setup and build up thousands of Twitter followers for it in a matter of days. But so what? Who cares if you have thousands of people following you on Twitter?
What does it really mean? Besides stroking your ego, what does that number really do for you?
Here are 10 reasons auto-following on Twitter is a waste of time:
(1) High Twitter Follower Counts Don’t Equal Social Proof Anymore – Having 20,000+ Twitter followers doesn’t mean you’re automatically worth listening to.
Auto-follow scripts have made it pretty easy to build up massive follower counts simply by following people in a given niche and having their auto-follow scripts follow you back.
So what though, that number is pretty much meaningless. None of those people really give a crap what you say. Most of them aren’t real people anyways.
(2) Following Too Many People Makes it Impossible to Stay On Top Of Tweets – What’s the point of following tens of thousands of people, when there is absolutely no way to ever stay on top of all the tweets.
All the people you actually do care about get lost in all the spam and garbage tweets. It’s kind of like trying to take a sip out of the fire hose.
Yes there is software you can install to filter out all crap except the small handful of people you actually want to listen to, but if you’re not going to be reading the other ten thousand people, why bother following them in the first place?
(3) Attracting the Wrong Followers – I would rather have 3 followers who actually care about what I am saying on Twitter, than 10,000 followers who auto-followed me with a script and will never, ever read any of my tweets.
All you do when you auto-follow is attract other auto-follower type twitter accounts.
(4) Auto-Follow Will Hurt Your Twitter Relationships – When I first started using Twitter and I had just a handful of people that I was following, I was able to stay on top of all their tweets and engage in meaningful conversations both with regular tweets and through direct messaging.
When I started following 1,200+ people that became impossible. I totally lost track of the people I actually wanted to listen to in the sea of twitter spam. Also with all the direct messaging spam all my real direct messages got lost in all the spam, so I missed out on connecting with people who genuinely wanted to connect with me.
(5) Following Tens of Thousands of People is Not Fun – Following a handful of people you actually care about connecting with is fun. Loading up your Twitter screen and seeing pages and pages of twitter spam is not fun.
(6) Use Twitter to Boost Your Business, Not Your Ego – If used correctly, Twitter can be a very powerful business tool. It can be a powerful tool to build trust and further establish online relationships with your customers and online friends.
Throwing that away just so you can brag about having a super high Twitter count (of mostly useless Twitter followers) is just an ego trip.
(7) Not Auto-Following Will Boost Your Credibility – If someone has 50,000 followers and is following 50,000 people as well, they don’t have as much credibility as someone who has 50,000 followers and is only following 100 people.
Who would you rather have following you? Someone who only follows a few very select people on Twitter, or someone who auto-follows every single person that follows them?
(8) Auto-Following Kills Twitter – Imagine if everyone out there had an auto-follow script installed and in a couple years you saw everyone with like 500k following/follower counts on their accounts.
Meanwhile, they’re all ignoring 99.99% of that list using filters and just paying attention to the few dozen people they actually care about. What’s the point of doing that? Why not just only follow those few dozen people in the first place?
(9) Auto-Following Kills the Value of Your Follow – What if John Reese, Frank Kern or Oprah started following you on Twitter tomorrow? Wouldn’t that be exciting? Of course it would. Oprah is only following 15 people right now. Imagine being the 16th person on her list.
Now contrast that with getting a follow from Oprah if she was also following the other 2 Million other followers she has. Big deal, her auto-follow script just followed you back. It’s worthless.
By not auto-following, when you DO follow someone they will know that you’re actually interested in hearing what they have to say.
(10) Easier Mobile Twitter Experience – When I first started using Twitter I used to use my iPhone to get the latest tweets. I could take my dog for a walk and see what people were up to. It was easy to keep track since I was only following a handful of people.
Then I started auto-following everyone and trying to stay on top of what’s happening on my iPhone became impossible with so many new tweets every second. It became overwhelming so I just stopped using Twitter on my iPhone altogether.
Yes there are apps out there that may be able to help you create filters so that you only see Tweets from a certain subgroup of people, but what’s the point of that? If you’re going to ignore 99.99% of the people you’re following, what’s the point of following them in the first place?
This is why I am now abandoning auto-following on Twitter.
I spent about an hour yesterday unfollowing everyone on my list. I still have to go back and add back the people that I do want to follow.
In some cases I actually prefer to follow certain people via their RSS feed, or as an email subscriber on their list instead of Twitter so if I am no longer following you after yesterday please don’t take it personally – it’s not you, I just had to hit the reset button and start again.
Doing this will hopefully make it much easier for me to be able to provide much more valuable Tweets for my followers, even if I don’t follow every one of you back.
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I agree with each point you mentioned above, but paul i am still stick to the rule of Auto-Follow.
-Shanker Bakshi
I absolutely and totally agree with you. My twitter goal is try to keep the people I follow to be people I want to follow. They are either people in my niche, or they are people I want look on as a mentor or to network with.
I would have to say that when I joined twitter last winter, people’s twitter numbers were lower than they are now, at last the people that I was following. I used to get more from twitter. It was easier for people to notice my tweets, and it was easier for me to see their tweets. As people’s numbers go up, it is becoming harder to use twitter in the same way as I originally was. In order to be noticed as much as I was, I need to try harder and tweet more often.
There’s just too much noise.
Great post! Personally, I’ve never understood why people use auto-follow tools. You’re right – it takes away from the experience of social media. The intent is to make real, personal relationships. You can’t do that with “auto-bots”. I look at my follower list every day or so and follow those that I truly find to be interesting. This seems to work for me.
You know, when I started to see the Twitter autofollows I thought, “What’s the point?” You’re right, you can’t actually communicate with that many people. So why even try or pretend.
Truthful article. I realized myself that many people agressively use twitter as a marketing tool.
One suggestion: Instead of decluttering your account you could set up a new one and even protect tweets if you want just an intimate friends circle.
I left my twitter account and currently follow only Steve Pavlina, I’ve added his tweets to a feed reader. Now I’ve also subscribed to your tweets for a testing period.
I agree with you on point # 6 & 7 very strongly. I firmly believe that they would cause a certain loss but this change is definitely worthwhile for all the users in long term to have people who matter & be a person of significance among them.
I couldn’t agree with you more Paul. The success of Twitter could be its own downfall. If everyone followed everyone else, the value of it becomes so diluted, it becomes pointless.
I DO auto-follow, but take a harsh axe to tweeters who are not within my interest or niche. I give the tweeter some grace and a chance to get my attention.
Simon
I completely agree and I don’t use autofollow for several of the reasons you mentioned. I don’t think it is useful to follow tons of people because there is no way to keep up with all of them. And I think that the items people post have to be useful to me in some way. When you autofollow you are giving up control. It might take a few days for you to look at who is following you, and if you don’t like what they are tweeting, you have to unfollow them, which is worse than not following them in the first place. So I follow people who are in the health and wellness field like myself, as well as those who are in marketing or who tweet about marketing and business topics. If someone is in a field that is not related to those topics, or is tweeting about things that are not related to those topics, I generally don’t follow them. (I do follow some people who live in my city, Santa Fe, even though they don’t fall into these categories because I know them from other places.) It’s nothing personal, and I don’t think people should take it personally when someone doesn’t follow them. It’s just the most efficient way for me to use Twitter.
There is also another issue not mentioned yet– I’ve noticed that there has been an increase in pornographic posts, along the lines of “Check out my X-rated pix” –and several of those people have “followed” me and I had to block them.
Though I’m not that much of a Twitter enthusiast but I do have a Twitter account. Twitter is no doubt one of hot marketing tool on the Internet today. Thanks for sharing the ideas about how to use Twitter in the right way. Your blog is a real store house of practical information.