Beginner Blogger

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In contrast to my How I Got 1000 TARGETED Twitter Followers In 30 Days blog post, I wanted to write about how you can get yourself twitter followers without the need to go out and add people yourself. Granted, you probably won’t get as many followers than if you went out and followed as many people as possible using services like Buzzom, but I believe if people voluntarily add you to twitter than those people are much more valuable to you. They went out of their way to add you, so as long as they’re not a spam account, you must be doing something right!

Here are my top 5 ways you can increase your twitter following without begging for one:

1. Provide valuable tweets

First and foremost, the main reason anyone would want to add you to twitter is because you provide great tweets. You won’t find yourself with many followers if you have an empty twitter account with no tweets. You’ll also find yourself lonely if you provide meaningless updates like ‘at the shops’, ‘lunch was yum’, ‘walking home’ etc.

Picture this – you’ve just started a twitter account and you’ve been focusing solely on creating great quality tweets. Suddenly someone finds you through search.twitter.com (or something like this) that likes what you’re saying about that certain topic. This person that just added you has over 1000 friends. He ReTweets one of your tweets which is broadcast to the 1000+ on that persons list. Those 1000+ people can then follow you on twitter or ReTweet your message again to their list, which may be broadcast to even more tweeters out there.

This is why the quality and value of your tweets are so important. Provide great quality and value and you’re sure to attract many many people.

2. Engage with your audience

Don’t go on autopilot. Don’t create one of those spam accounts that just read out RSS feeds. Sure put some auto-RSS feeds on your twitter account if they relate to your niche or your purpose, but make sure you’re a person as well. People are more likely to recommend you to others willingly if you’re an approachable and engaging person on twitter.

There is a novelty on twitter on Fridays called Follow Friday (#FF or #FollowFriday) where people nominate people that they think everyone on their twitter list should follow. I’ve found that the people that recommend me for Follow Friday are the ones I have engaged with on twitter the most, some have very large twitter followings so I’ve generated a lot of followers this way.

A great idea is to make it a habit to send a message to every person that adds you to twitter that you are going to add back. Your relationship will improve dramatically this way than not interacting with them at all and them just being ‘another one to the list’

3. ReTweet valuable relative content

This is why I believe you should have a purpose/niche on twitter. If you have a clear purpose/niche people that are interested in your niche will follow you. If you ReTweet something related to your niche it goes to everyone on your list. So it’s of great benefit to have people following you that are interested in what you ReTweet.

ReTweeting also builds relationships. People love it when you ReTweet their tweets. So if someone tweets something you like and you think others on your list will enjoy ReTweet it because they might re-ReTweet it to others not following you and you may find yourself with more quality followers!

4. Follow those that are beneficial to you

Don’t just follow random people and don’t feel you have to follow people back if they follow you. You choose who you follow, no-one else. If people are thinking of following you they may check out who else you’re following. If you’re following a bunch of spam accounts and people tweeting unpleasant links or offensive content they may think twice before following you.

It doesn’t make any sense to follow someone that won’t gain anything from your twitter account – so don’t do it. Having 10 people that follow me that find my content useful, helpful and more likely to click on my links is much more valuable than 100 random followers that will ignore most if not everything I have to say.

5. Have a custom Twitter background, avatar, bio and preferably website.

You should fill these out before you even start tweeting. A bio and picture I feel is absolutely necessary and bare minimum to at least know you’re human. I would also change your background from the default blue/green background.

Personally I only add people that I feel are real people. I’m very picky now of who I follow now because I don’t want to follow those I’m not interested in.

A custom background, avatar, bio and preferably a link to your website is ideal. I always check out a website of someone before I add them to twitter. If it takes me to a sales page I probably won’t add you unless I’m impressed with your tweets and you’re not spamming.

To clarify – spamming to me is constant tweets that link off to sales pages and it’s obviously just a twitter account made to create money. I don’t want any part of that thanks.

Find your purpose

Make sure you find your purpose on twitter. I use @beginnerblogger mainly to help others with their blogging, provide valuable blogging tips I feel bloggers and beginner bloggers will gain value from and also from time to time put in the odd personal tweet. I make sure the personal tweets are not boring like ‘off to the shops’, I try and make them interesting too.

Something I’m going to do over the next few weeks is really go through my twitter list, engage with those I haven’t engaged with and unfollow the ‘unhuman’ twitter accounts that are of no benefit to me. I want to engage with real people. My struggle at the moment is that I am following too many people and it’s near impossible to keep up with everyone as much as I’d like.

What do you feel are great ways to get more quality followers without having to beg for them? Reply in the comments below.

Enjoyed this post? Here are some more you may like:

1. How I Got 1000 TARGETED Twitter Followers In 30 Days
2. Twitter Had Crashed
3. Twitter TweetDeck and some Tips

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Comments

There are 19 comments for this post.

  1. Tom - StandOutBlogger.com on October 27, 2009 8:33 pm

    Some fantastic tweets! I started gaining followers by adding everyone but decided that is just counter productive. I think theses tips are gold!

  2. Sarge on October 27, 2009 9:22 pm

    Too true Tom. I think my twitter focus for next month will be filtering out my current list of followers and really connecting with what I have. Would still like to get to 2000 followers but I’m realising the number of followers isn’t important, it’s the amount of connections you make.

  3. Firas Steitiyeh on October 27, 2009 9:35 pm

    Really great tips and information Sarge!! well done! And I would like to add that those also increase the chance of having your tweet RTed not only will help you gain more followers!

    Best,
    Steit

  4. Kim S. on October 28, 2009 6:38 am

    Great advise. When someone follows me on Twitter, I check out their profile page to make sure there’s nothing vulgar or spammy and then follow them for a week or two. If I don’t get anything interesting from them in that time I unfollow. I’ve noticed most people don’t notice if you drop them, and by that time either they’re hooked on your tweets or they’re not! I have 88 followers right now, and while it doesn’t seem like much, all I’ve done to get them is my tweets, so I feel like they are more likely to be looking forward to my posts and clicking the links I provide. At least that’s what I tell myself!

    Another tip is to watch the trending topics for something that ties into your niche and pounce on it when you find it. That blows your audience wide open.

  5. krissy knox on October 28, 2009 2:57 pm

    All excellent points! What I find most important is providing valuable tweets, and interacting. I also find it extremely important (if not even more so) to only choose like minded people to follow. Those with your interests, or in your niche, or with similar values, or in your profession, etc. Randomly following people will merely give you a spammy list and clog up your stream with useless information, not allowing you to communicate with the followers you do want to communicate with, when you want to. This rule of choosing wisely, and not randomly following, goes for following first, as well as following back. Thanks for an excellent post!

  6. Sarge on October 28, 2009 8:16 pm

    @Steit – Cheers man. Agreed, following the 5 steps, or even just the first one really should definitely increase your chance of being retweeted.

    @Kim – That’s a great number of followers based off just tweeting and not following. I agree I don’t think many people do notice if they’ve unfollowed them at all. Although I did have one person actually get quite nasty about me unfollowing them and if you saw his tweets you’d understand why.

    @ Krissy – Thanks :)

    I sort of regret using Buzzom now and adding lots of people really quickly. I have a heap of people I’m following and people following me back that I don’t really know at all. I feel the urge to use a mass unfollow button but I don’t want to lose people like Darren Rowse that don’t always follow people back (I don’t think he’s following me). I know Buzzom has a feature where you can ‘lock’ people in. So I can lock Darren in then unfollow everyone that isn’t following me back but keep Darren as someone I’m following still (it won’t unfollow them).

    Either that or I start creating groups. I should make a post on how I use twitter and get everyone to post how they use it too as I’d really love to know how other people manage their twitter accounts, especially those with hundreds and thousands of followers.

    I just want to be following people that I can really connect with and feel it’s worth following them.

  7. listenupnorth on October 29, 2009 2:40 am

    New to twitter, blogged for a few months, so finding your website and posts really helpful.

  8. Farnoosh Brock on October 29, 2009 12:23 pm

    Hmmm. This is making me think. I may need to change my approach. I have been using Twitter for two reasons mainly, for promoting the blog posts I write, and for fun and exploration. But I would love to have a more focused purpose, and would love to help others. The one thing I do do is encourage and inspire others in my fields of interest and niche like yoga, tango, traveling…..but alas, heaps of things to improve on now that I see your list! :) Thank you!

  9. ileane on October 29, 2009 7:29 pm

    Where did you get that image? I love it, and it’s really hysterical. lol

    Great post, now I see why you have so many followers!

  10. Sarge on October 29, 2009 7:36 pm

    @listenupnorth – Glad you’re finding my posts helpful :)

    @Farnoosh – Having fun on twitter is important too. Shows some personality which I think can go missing sometimes, especially with big businesses and hardcore online marketers etc. A good mixture of your niche or ‘business’ side of things along with some personality and ‘fun’ posts work great together. :)

    @Ileane – Flickr is your friend! I am getting most of my images now from Flickrs creative commons section. You’re free to use them if you credit the photographer in some way. I provide a link to the photographers page if you click on the image. The twitter logo I found from an icon site where you can download most icons for free (make sure you check before you download)

    Resources:
    Flickr creative commons – http://www.flickr.com/creativecommons/by-2.0/
    Icon Finder – http://www.iconfinder.net/

  11. Ben Lang on November 1, 2009 8:58 am

    Great tips, Im working on that and slowly moving up :)

  12. Mikkel "DaneBlogger" Juhl on November 8, 2009 7:35 pm

    Sarge, this is great. Awesome tips, here.

    If you add some bloggers from your niche (just take those who follow @copyblogger or so) then reply them, after you’ve followed them. Tell them they have a nice blog.

    Then they probably will follow you back. Now you just have to maintain the relationship! Keep up the good work!

  13. Sarge on November 9, 2009 7:17 pm

    @Ben – Thanks man – let me know how you get on!

    @Mikkel – Yeah you’re right. It doesn’t hurt to interact with the big guys. The worst that can happen is that they’ll ignore you (as it’s highly unlikely they’ll flame you or anything just for saying hi or complimenting them!)

    I think there is a mentality issue with some people and I’m guilty of it too – that you just think those people are so high up that they wouldn’t bother talking or acknowledging you. But that’s not true at all, most of these people are very approachable. I sent a tweet to Chris Brogan a while ago just saying hi pretty much and got a reply back. Simple, but wanted to break the ice.

  14. Derek Jensen on November 12, 2009 2:48 pm

    Love the tips Sarge!

    I personally have created multiple Twitter accounts to help distinguish my followers and my tweets.

    At first I just had one account @djj1758 but then I created three:

    @ djj1758, @lifenotion, @newsketch Each one is focused on a particular blog of mine since I have three main ones.

  15. Alison Moore Smith on December 3, 2009 3:10 pm

    Sarge, this is a great post. Twitter is so hyped, but I still don’t find much in the way of basic, common sense info about it. You’ve done a great job.

  16. Sarge on December 6, 2009 7:42 am

    @Derek – Glad you enjoyed the tips! I have multiple twitter accounts too. @beginnerblogger for this site. @sargeventure for my whole online pursuit, including this site – mainly for interacting with anyone that I’ve met online and into my online ‘ventures’ etc. @sargeonline is my for fun twitter account but I rarely use it. Mainly I’ve just been using @beginnerblogger :)

    @Alison – Glad you liked the post! I used to think twitter was over-hyped but that was before I really used it. I think it lives to the hype and is a great source of valuable information if you can find the right people to follow.

    Just don’t spend every waking minute on it ;)

  17. Guilherme on December 8, 2009 5:15 am

    Nice tips! I’ll try to put in practice! Thanks!

  18. Codrut @ Blog Post Ideas on December 20, 2009 6:25 am

    All your tips are proven to work, as I’ve been personally tested them since I started twittering back in March 2009, although you’d be in big trouble if you’re targeting the wrong crowd [niche]

    Why?

    Because 1% will probably listen to you, or click on your links.

    P.S. I have friends with 5k followers, getting ZERO clicks…

  19. Justin on May 18, 2010 11:56 am

    No one is going to be your friend offline or online if you keep telling them crap. Being yourself, open honest and sharing great content is a proven natural, sure fire way to have some fun and get the benefits of social networking

    Good post

    cheers

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