Aug 02 2007

Twitter reconsidered

Published by at 3:12 pm under Interactive Marketing

James Governor at RedMonk emailed this morning to warn me of some negative chatter on Twitter about failing ThinkPads. Yikes. I went looking for the “twits” but couldn’t find them. Guess it’s time to add another channel for monitoring customer satisfaction. I threw Twitter overboard last spring — ripped it out of the sidebar of the blog. Now it appears I have yet another thing to monitor. Add that to my current infatuation with Facebook and I’m beginning to sound like a Scoble-wannabe.

8 responses so far

8 Responses to “Twitter reconsidered”

  1. Mark Cahillon 02 Aug 2007 at 5:10 pm

    But Dave, I heard a guy bitching in the men’s room at Logan Airport the other day. Does that mean we’ll need to station guys in there as well?

  2. site adminon 02 Aug 2007 at 5:59 pm

    har-de-har-har

  3. James Governoron 03 Aug 2007 at 4:02 am

    when its David Weinberger, its not “just a guy”. I can help you find the tweets if you want

  4. site adminon 03 Aug 2007 at 7:10 am

    Precisely. James — I left David a note offering assistance Thanks so much.

  5. markitudeon 03 Aug 2007 at 4:05 pm

    Ok – but let me explore Cahill’s point for a second.

    Prior to the dawn of social media, people that had something to say, said it directly. They sent email, they wrote letters, they picked up the phone. They said your name, put a comma, and then made their point. You knew that you were the intended audience. A reaction or response was expected.

    People also tend to mumble to themselves, say things out loud, and rhetorically. Responses aren’t necessarily expected or desired.

    Now social media, through all the various ways that people can personally broadcast themselves has opened up an enormouse grey area. How many different channels do we feel compelled to eaves drop upon? What channels are reserved for idle thoughts, and which are broad communications to a general audience (any and all who find it), and lastly, when are the same channels used, but with a clear call out, as you did testing out Southwest this week?

  6. Rick Klauon 06 Aug 2007 at 11:54 am

    David – it’s not perfect, but I use a Google alert, searching for a few keywords, restricted to site:twitter.com. Subscribe to that as an RSS feed (or just have it e-mail you), and you’ll see the majority of tweets that need a response. Seems to get the job done.

  7. site adminon 06 Aug 2007 at 12:04 pm

    Rick you rule.

  8. [...] Twitter’s new track feature is really remarkable. Back in March, I  asked (on Twitter, naturally): So… if I wanted to monitor the twitter public timeline for mentions of “FeedBurner”, how would I go about doing that? I ended up answering my own question, and it spawned a nice comment from Chris Thilk who implemented my hack (using Google’s site search) to monitor his own topics of interest. A few months later, David Churbuck at Lenovo realized he needed to be monitoring Twitter as well, and went the same route as I had. [...]

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