Friday, June 05, 2009

Tweeting to distraction

Anybody remember “Rico Suave”. Yeah, I do to. It is something that got overplayed, overhyped, and now it’s just embarrassing when it gets stuck in your head and you can’t get it out.

I think the world is eventually going to feel the same way about Twitter. A Sports Illustrated article today talks about how Twitter is changing sports, or at least our relationship as fans with sports stars. While they provide some compelling evidence, Twitter as the hot thing isn’t likely to keep momentum, and there are some lessons to be learned.

Twitter isn’t really sustainable from a user or a reader platform on a mass basis. A short article by Baltimore Sun critic David Zurawik on Nielsen reporting that most users opt out after the first months points this out. For average people, they realize pretty quickly that letting everyone know everything that you are thinking or doing takes a lot of thinking and doing. It violates one of the basic facts of good communication which is that it has to be interesting and most of us just aren’t that interesting on a minute by minute basis. If you need further proof read my blog.

From the perspective of a fan or listener, I will admit that Twitter appears to have more usage, but not across a broad spectrum. There are a group of people that care enough to follow Stewart Cink’s every thought, but the longer that goes on the more that crowd thins to a pretty interesting few. There isn’t a profit motive for Cink and it has the making of creating a strange relationship with fans. For instance, I can’t even imagine my wife wanting hourly updates about my life let alone anyone else.

So, for those of you in communication and marketing I would say that Twitter is a potential time killer without a lot of upside. Sure it can be used for some useful things, but on an individual level the work doesn’t necessarily lead to the benefits one might hope for.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

I recently haven taken up twitter as well. I find it has been useful in networking as well as collecting tips and tricks for my trade. However, I too have noticed it has been an additional time consumer in my day. I have not yet found a way to leverage it for marketing and communication - except for the pure novelty of it. It has become a fairly hot topic (I see it was the cover story in a recent Time Magazine) and I want to be on the cutting edge but I do not yet know how this medium plays into the viral marketing we have come to know and love. Blogging seems to have been the same such "broadcast myself" phenomenon that has lasted (although partially diminished). I guess twitter is just the ADHD version of a blog. Thanks for the article Chato! Hope you are doing well.

Chatohaze said...

The key thing in your post and why you are destined for greatness is the comment, "I haven't found a way to leverage it YET". It means you are trying to and thinking about it which is great.

Unknown said...

Thanks Chato - loving the blog by the way.