The Pareto Principle of Twitter Spam

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The Pareto Principle – 80% of something comes from 20% of something – is so often repeated that it’s cliche.

It’s also true.

The majority of your revenue comes from a minority of customers.

The majority of your time spent on anything is focused on a minority of time sinks.

and so forth.

Twitter’s no different. Recently, Robert Scoble unfollowed everyone. He paid a service to do a mass, mass unfollow of hundreds of thousands of people and has been manually refollowing since then. For those of us with fewer connections than Robert, it’s worth pointing out that the majority of crap in your Twitter stream comes from a minority of people. Filter them out, unfollow them, and you’ll see Twitter become usable again.

My criteria for an instant unfollow are pretty simple:

1. If you talk about making money on Twitter at all, you’re gone. This is the fastest and easiest kill of all.

2. If you talk without listening – meaning your stream has absolutely no conversation, you’re gone. Doubly so if all you’ve got are sales and promotions.

3. If you just retweet with nothing else, nothing original, not even “my cat just threw up!”, you’re gone, because you’re probably a robot.

4. If you’re a robot, you’re gone. Robots are fairly easy to spot – unlike humans, they typically truncate tweets mid word over and over again in their stream.

5. If you’ve just got stuff I don’t care about in your stream, you’re gone. One person had nothing but quotes from Jesus in their stream. Not my cup of tea, being Buddhist and all. Another person was a true cat blogger and cat tweeter with nothing else. I have a cat, so rather than experience their cat vicariously, I’ll just peek at my lump of gray fur.

Here’s a simple way to weed out the crap. Once an hour, go to your Twitter home page. Browse through the tweets. Cull off any stupidity or robots you see, and repeat for a couple of days. It takes literally seconds to peek quickly and make a decision – we’re not talking a major investment of your time at all.

You’ll find that just by pruning out the garbage after a few runs, Twitter will be easier to use. The Pareto Principle holds true – 80% of your crap is from 20% of your follows, so nuke them.

If you use a client like Tweetdeck, you’ll find you miss fewer updates from friends, especially if you follow a lot of people. All clients like Tweetdeck pull a limited number of tweets from your stream on a regular basis, so the more crap you filter out, the less likely it is you’ll miss good stuff from your friends.

Remember, unfollowing someone doesn’t mean you stop communicating with them. You can and always should be monitoring without needing to follow – if you haven’t grabbed a copy, go get the Twitter Power Guide eBook. It’s free.


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Comments

7 responses to “The Pareto Principle of Twitter Spam”

  1. jlbraaten Avatar

    You're ahead of the pack again, Chris. While everyone else is still talking about how to get involved with Social Media, you're looking forward and ensuring that people that do use it can keep it useful. Thanks for the post!

  2. Stuart Foster Avatar

    Personally? I love following the psychic cat bloggers (maybe that's just me though).

  3. jlbraaten Avatar

    You’re ahead of the pack again, Chris. While everyone else is still talking about how to get involved with Social Media, you’re looking forward and ensuring that people that do use it can keep it useful. Thanks for the post!

  4. Stuart Foster Avatar

    Personally? I love following the psychic cat bloggers (maybe that's just me though).

  5. Ed Shahzade Avatar

    What too few do, is weed out follow-ers, instead of only junk they're follow-ing.
    If everybody blocked the junk, Twitter would be a far less attractive hunting ground for the spammers, etc.
    It should not need to be an hourly exercise to clean your following list,
    unless you follow many without checking 1st.

    I know from whence I speak, having blocked and helped nuke a record amount 😉
    I have less spam followers than anyone per capita, and would have roughly 10,000 followers
    if I hadn't blocked so many from '07 to mid-'09.
    I also scare them off by threatening those who cheat with “get followers” software.
    (Hint: Twitter can see and is recording every account cheating)

    When an account is blocked 10 times, it triggers an automatic review by the @Spam team,
    who generally know at 1st glance if they're banning them or not.
    They had to make it that high, because immature fools in arguments with friends/rivals etc
    were acting very MySpace and lobbying different classmates/trailer park mates
    to gang up so an opposing person would be banned.

  6. Ed Avatar

    What too few do, is weed out follow-ers, instead of only junk they’re follow-ing.
    If everybody blocked the junk, Twitter would be a far less attractive hunting ground for the spammers, etc.
    It should not need to be an hourly exercise to clean your following list,
    unless you follow many without checking 1st.

    I know from whence I speak, having blocked and helped nuke a record amount 😉
    I have less spam followers than anyone per capita, and would have roughly 10,000 followers
    if I hadn’t blocked so many from ’07 to mid-’09.
    I also scare them off by threatening those who cheat with “get followers” software.
    (Hint: Twitter can see and is recording every account cheating)

    When an account is blocked 10 times, it triggers an automatic review by the @Spam team,
    who generally know at 1st glance if they’re banning them or not.
    They had to make it that high, because immature fools in arguments with friends/rivals etc
    were acting very MySpace and lobbying different classmates/trailer park mates
    to gang up so an opposing person would be banned.

    But if far more people blocked, the worst would be flushed out
    much more quickly, leaving our neighborhood cleaner, sooner 🙂

  7. Ed Avatar

    What too few do, is weed out follow-ers, instead of only junk they're follow-ing.
    If everybody blocked the junk, Twitter would be a far less attractive hunting ground for the spammers, etc.
    It should not need to be an hourly exercise to clean your following list,
    unless you follow many without checking 1st.

    I know from whence I speak, having blocked and helped nuke a record amount 😉
    I have less spam followers than anyone per capita, and would have roughly 10,000 followers
    if I hadn't blocked so many from '07 to mid-'09.
    I also scare them off by threatening those who cheat with “get followers” software.
    (Hint: Twitter can see and is recording every account cheating)

    When an account is blocked 10 times, it triggers an automatic review by the @Spam team,
    who generally know at 1st glance if they're banning them or not.
    They had to make it that high, because immature fools in arguments with friends/rivals etc
    were acting very MySpace and lobbying different classmates/trailer park mates
    to gang up so an opposing person would be banned.

    But if far more people blocked, the worst would be flushed out
    much more quickly, leaving our neighborhood cleaner, sooner 🙂

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