I found this picture on Flickr under the heading:
“#Follow Friday - Please don't do this
Courtesy
LilPecan, Flickr
Many
Facebook users have, by now, dabbled in Twitter. These social
networkers can normally be classified by two traits: 1) those who
used it for a day, thought of it as a slimmed-down and largely
pointless version of Facebook and didn't go back onto it, and 2)
those who saw that there was a purpose to the site that differed from
the purpose of Facebook. Facebook is for keeping in touch with your
friends and showing them what you're doing with your life. Twitter is
for sharing information with the world. It's for bringing people
together who have similar interests. Where Facebook displays what has
happened, Twitter shares what is happening. When Facebook is being
reactive, Twitter is being proactive. In short, Twitter is for people
who believe they have something to say that's worth listening to,
something that can affect people.
In
January 2009, the “Follow Friday” trend emerged. The #ff hashtag
burst onto our newsfeeds, and occasionally onto our Mentions page.
Essentially, the #ff tag is for people the tweeter thinks their
followers should also be following. It's a bit of ego-stroking for
those mentioned, basically. For more info on Follow Fridays, see
Mashable's (now slightly dated) write-up.
I've
seen a few people's tweets criticising the #ff trend, saying that
such mentions haven't gotten them any new followers. And they're
right. I'm not aware that any of my followers started following me
because of an #ff tweet.
I
think the thing missing from these particular Friday-themed tweets is
a REASON for us to follow the people mentioned. I always wonder, who
are they? And why should I follow them? Now, with only 140 characters
per tweet to spare, we would have to change the face of Follow
Fridays somewhat to make them more effective. Here's what I propose
we tweeters do: let's not pack our tweets with mentions buffered with
the #ff hashtag. Instead, why not include one mention per tweet,
complete with the hashtag and a description of the mentioned account
or, to coin a phrase, a “follow reason”. So I might- for
instance- tweet “#ff @Mashablesocialmedia for the latest info on the internet and social media.” That's more
tempting, right? It would take a bit of time to write out the tweets,
and a bit more time for the trend (the, er, trend of doing the trend
differently) to take off, but am I right in thinking this is
something that could work for people worldwide?
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