Are
You Guilty of Annoying Others via Social Networks
by
Kathleen Gage
The
Street Smarts Speaker and Author
The saga of my recent Facebook ousting continues. Not only have
I not been able to get back on FB, I still have no idea as to
why I got “excommunicated” in the first place.
However, I have found the experience to be one of introspection.
As a matter of fact, many people, myself included, are
evaluating our past, current and future involvement on social
networks in general.
Take Twitter. With the ability to automate the Direct Message
feature, the number of emails clogging inboxes everywhere with
useless messages has gotten way out of control. For those who
don’t know about this feature, basically you set it up so when
someone follows you an automatic welcome message goes to the
person who just requested the follow.
Although this may seem like a great idea in theory, in reality
it is a pain in the backside for most of us. Here’s my
experience; daily I was getting lots of auto DMs from folks I
don’t know who immediately tried to sell me something, encourage
me to look at a site with useless information, or what not.
Admittedly, I had my Twitter account set up so the minute you
followed me, you automatically got a DM with something like,
“Thanks for the follow. I do all I can to tweet useful
information.”
Although a nice welcome, how many people actually read the
message compared to how many get very annoyed with yet another
blanket message arriving in their inbox?
Think about how many of these messages you get from your Twitter
connections. How many of the automated ones do you actually
read? Initially it may be something you get excited about, but
in short order it gets to be very annoying and a huge
timewaster; especially if you try to read every single message.
Once you realize that it is automated, the frustration mounts.
After realizing how annoyed I was with all the junk mail (and
knowing I was likely annoying others), I disengaged the DM
feature. Now when someone gets a DM from me it is manually done
which means I really wanted to send you a message of value.
I also disengaged the automatic DMs I got from others. Daily I
was getting dozens, even hundreds of useless messages that I
never read anyway. Now I know that when I get a DM it is the
real deal and the sender actually wanted to send me a message of
value.
Yes, dear readers, many folks are taking a good look at the
process and becoming more selective about who we follow,
befriend, tweet, twoot, hoot, capture or whatever the latest and
greatest term happens to be for any specific social network
communication we are involved in.
The whole idea of social networks is to create value in the
relationships we develop. At least that’s what we would love to
think.
Although automation is great on the one hand, on the other hand
it is something that has impersonalized how we communicate and
has become a huge annoyance more times than not.
Let’s bring back the days we actually welcome messages and
announcements rather than cringing when we see our inbox
cluttered with useless garbage.
Kathleen
Gage works with spiritually aware speakers, authors, coaches and
consultants who are ready to turn their knowledge into
money-making products and services. She does this by teaching
them how to publish their works via books, eBased information
products, teleseminars, webinars and any medium that can be
distributed via the Internet. Visit
www.kathleengage.com
to learn more.
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