“Why do you use Twitter? How does Twitter Benefit You?”
I’ve been asked these questions so many times since starting TwiTip that I thought I’d write a post answering it. I hope that it’s helpful for those of you just starting out with Twitter (or considering getting involved).
Twitter has changed the way that I use the web and connect with others online in many ways. Those of you who’ve traveled with me on my Twitter journey since the beginning know that I started out very skeptical of the medium.
It always seemed like a waste of time – however once I started using it I immediately began to see its potential and some tangible benefits to me. Let me try to break some of them down:
Twitter is a great tool for research – today Hendry Lee from BlogBuildingU.com (@hendrylee) gives the ‘why’ and ‘how’ to do it.
We have all been there. After I registered with Twitter in 2007, I sat down looking at the screen, didn’t know what to do next.
“What the heck am I going to do with 140 characters?”
I didn’t understand why people want to know when or why I just took a can of Coke. (After all, the question on the Twitter page is “What are you doing?”)
I still don’t claim to know everything about Twitter until today, even though I learn hard to understand it. Well, perhaps that is the awesomeness of Twitter. Right now, if you go to TechCrunch, starting from their home page and browsing through the archives, almost in every page you will see a mention of Twitter or one of the myriad number of Twitter-related services / tools.
It seems like every day there are new ways to use Twitter. Some of those tools stay, but a few of them are no longer with us.
There really is something in the 140 characters.
Out of those fun things to do with Twitter, one thing that I personally think most useful is using Twitter as a research tool.
Even if you just heard of Twitter right now, you can start using the data if you know where and how to get them.
This article is written to help. Because there are so many things you could do with Twitter, I will only give a few examples of using various tools for research, and leave the rest for you as an exercise of imagination. (more…)