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Think Twice Before Changing Your Avatar!

10/03/2009 | By Diana Adams
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I’ve been on Twitter daily for many months now and my photo was becoming outdated. I decided to update it with a recent photo since I look drastically different now.

It was a split second decision. I didn’t think about it much, after all, it’s just a picture, right? While I was eating lunch at my desk, I took thirty seconds and changed the photo.

I was not at all prepared for the backlash I received as a result of that decision.

I received many tweets and direct messages from my followers who were not happy with the change. It was obvious in some of the tweets I received that people were perplexed and confused. It felt almost like I was no longer a “twitter friend” – I suddenly felt like a stranger to people I have known for a long time.

These messages said things like:
“Oh, I don’t like this, now it’s strange to talk to you.”
“Now I can’t find your tweets in my steam.”
“This is going to take some getting used to.”
The list goes on and on.

After four hours of these kinds of messages, I conceded and put my picture back to the original one.

Here are the two different avatars so you can see the contrast:

Why did that happen? My friend, Einar Rice @EinarRice and I had an interesting exchange about this. He suggested that I write this article.

Is it possible that our personal brand is locked into our avatar? Is it possible that you can lose your following when you have a different look?

I consulted my “brandologist” friend, Shelly Kramer @ShellyKramer, who refuses to be called an expert, about the topic. Shelly explained, “Think about when some big brand, something that you’ve known, loved, used, etc., for years, changes its look. When that happens, people love it or hate it, but they usually have strong feelings rather than ambivalence. It’s because as humans, we really and truly loathe change. Our avatars are very much our brands.”

According to this very interesting article entitled Why Coca Cola Really Won The Cola Wars – One of the reasons Coke won the cola war with Pepsi is because Pepsi kept changing their logo, meanwhile tampering with brand loyalty. Coke, on the other hand, also updated their logo many times, but always used a version very similar to the original.

Of course, there are exceptions to this rule. Anna Obrien @AnnaOBrien is an example of someone who drastically changed her avatar and it worked well. Anna went from a blonde conservative look to a brunette nerdy look. Check out the contrast:

According to Anna, “I think when I switched to the nerdier avatar, I got more respect. It’s sad to say, but true. I feel once I was more consistent with my avatar (blog, Facebook, Twitter, etc..) people were more willing to trust my overall brand. When you first change it, people forget who you are.”

What I’ve learned from this whole experience is exactly what Shelly said, “People get attached to avatars.” It’s true.

Bottom line, if you are new to Twitter, choose your avatar wisely. If you are a twitter veteran, think twice before changing your avatar. Your current avatar has built relationships, built trust and built a reputation. Think twice before tampering with your own “brand loyalty.”

More Articles By Diana Adams

Author: Diana Adams

By day, Diana is the CEO/owner of Adams Consulting Group, Inc, a technology services and business solutions consultancy firm serving the specific needs of its clients in advertising and public relations. By night, she lives and breathes by writing. After publishing a small cookbook last year, she is now working on her new masterpiece, scheduled for publishing next year. “I could write all night long and not get tired of it. I think that is when you know you’ve tapped into a true passion. Whatever that thing may be, if you could do it all day or night long, lose track of time, ‘wake up’ ten hours later, and still thirst for more, that is a passion, and I feel like I’ve found that in my writing.” Diana also spends many hours each week assisting the homeless men and women in Atlanta. You can find her on Twitter at @adamsconsulting.


50 Comments

andywilliamson1

October 3rd, 2009

i believe that with my avitar being that of a married couple gives a secure look and hopefully would give followers a feeling of security. hopefully!!

[Reply]

Sp4rkR4t

October 3rd, 2009

All I can say is you obviously have some mentally deficient followers on your twitter account, yes you get used to pictures but that is also the whole point, things change and you get used to them so deal with it.

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Misty Belardo

October 3rd, 2009

Very good choice of topic, I remember that day when you did change you avatar, Me, I loved the new look, it really did not matter to me if you changed it because I knew that it was the same person represented in the avatar. The kind, loving, sweet and very intelligent woman I have come to know and my very close friend. But in a way I also agree with Shelly, its your brand, people have gotten comfortable with seeing you with that avatar everyday. And when you change it makes others feel uncomfortable.

I remember having the same problem before, maybe it would be good too for people to also be open to some changes we want to make. Great share as always Diana!!

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shelly kramer

October 3rd, 2009

Great post, D.

And for me, the most important thing about avatars is just keeping it real. We always want the pic that we think makes us look the “hottest” when, honestly, we should use the pic that is the most honest. Being real is what social media is all about, so if you present yourself in this space as one thing, then show up at an event looking completely different, people might actually feel they’ve been had. So, change isn’t necessarily bad, it just should be part of the keeping it real process.

And, as an aside, I wholeheartedly disagree with anyone ever using a picture of their wife, child, family, etc., because, for me, that is not real either. I am not speaking with your family,your infant or you AND your wife/husband. I am speaking and connecting and engaging with you. You – you are the brand of you – whether professional or personal, and I think people should take that to heart.

I also agree with Misty – we are who we are. We change (just like Anna did), and whether you like it or not, get used to it. Change isn’t always a bad thing.

Not being real is what’s bad. So, don’t rush to change that hair color if you really, really love it. And if you decide to stay a blonde, change that avvie and tell people to deal – because it’s real. Today. And when you change, tomorrow, they can deal with that, too.

Love your writing, Diana – thanks for always making my days a little brighter. Mwah to you.

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juozas cernius Reply:

I’d agree over all, especially about using more individualistic pics. Change isn’t always a bad thing at all. Perhaps the increments of change should be tolerable so as as to avoid drastic changes of interpretation.

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Mia Chambers

October 3rd, 2009

I updated my avatar in the last month and people haven’t been able to find me. When they do, I was surprised how many people told me the same thing: they didn’t recognize my tweets. Here I thought I was doing the right thing by keeping it fresh and ended up vexing people. Who’d a thunk it?

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TyAnn Rolph

October 3rd, 2009

My avitar is of a big poodle at a bar with a beer. Its fun, but I don’t know what people think? The pet lovers probably like it. Respect??? I hope it at least makes people smile. :-) @PoodlePlus1 (twitter)

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Brian McDaniel

October 3rd, 2009

Oh, this irks me to no end. No doubt, branding is important. But if your avatar is a personal photo, you have every right to update it as your look changes over time. Most of your followers – if they truly are “followers” will get used to your new look just as they do whenever an organization changes their logo. Those who stop following or turn on you because you change your photo/avatar really need to get a grip. And if they drop you because of a photo change, were they really all that important in the first place? I say do what you believe is right in your heart and those that care about you for real will not waver.

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Kimba Green

October 3rd, 2009

Great post. I changed from a cartoon avatar to a picture of myself and my following changed. Yes, it increased. I figured people now knew I was real. Thank you for putting into words why our avatars are so important.

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Jerry Thompson

October 3rd, 2009

When did “friends” dictate self-expression? Isn’t that the point of avatars on profiles? Some people use a quirky photo, some an illustration, or a logo of some type. Anyone who would have concern over someone else’s avatar is taking things a bit too personally. I say if its a photo of you, update it however you like.

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Ruhani Rabin

October 3rd, 2009

Actually changing avatar on twitter for me means .. losing the Identity .. becz i detect a lot of my friends by avatar .. plus this also reflects the personality branding.. completely agreed with Diana and Shelly reflected on this matter..

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Paul McConaughy (@minutrition)

October 3rd, 2009

Maybe we need a way to transition our pictures. New and old side-by-side for a while, then the old one drops off. Some techie can do that – right. With all the new ribbons out there that out to be a piece of cake.

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Alaia

October 3rd, 2009

Guilty: I have left just such notes as above to twitter friends! The main reason that it shakes me up is because I don’t read all the notes that I receive but look for certain people everyday to see what they are up to. I am looking for the visual cue of their picture. If they change it I have a harder time finding them or I think they are not posting anymore.This is particularly true when I want some info about something that a particular person is known to post.I just look for them by glancing at the avatars in the stream rather than reading each post.

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Hugh Briss

October 3rd, 2009

@ChrisBrogan changes his photo avatar a couple times a week and that is part of his brand. His followers expect it and this whole “I can’t find your tweets anymore” argument is absurd. Unless you change your Twitter name how hard is it to follow someone. Are these people actually suggesting that you should still be using the same photo for your avatar 2 years from now when you don’t even look like the photo anymore?

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Place For Bloggers

October 3rd, 2009

@Hugh I think that most of us if not all should use the same avatar.
If you want to change avatar then don’t just do it one day and surprise your followers. Why not announce it some time before, maybe even share them in the process by letting them select a favorite avatar out of several options.
That way once you change your avatar they would be ready.

Place For Bloggers

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@BethFrysztak

October 3rd, 2009

D – Great blog as always – what a wonderful post. How interesting it is that ppl are so attached to the avatar that they know. I remember when one of the SM Icons was talking about how they track all of their followers. This person actually uses a Twitter Client that does not show avatars so that they follow ppl based on their content – not their picture.

Whatever your look D – you are always inspiring, wonderful and I love to see your avatar (ANY avatar) come across my Tweetdeck!

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bruckl

October 3rd, 2009

I’ve noticed on forums that I tend to look at a user’s avatar, not the name. So, when someone changed the avatar, I’m like, “Who are you?” until I look at the the username. Familiarity really is the issue.

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Rolando

October 3rd, 2009

Great article, really! And to think that once I went through a period where I’d change my avatar on a daily basis; sometimes more than once in a single day. Fortunately I think I’ve finally found the right one which I plan to keep, if not forever, at least for a very, very long time after having read this article’s conclusions.

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meg

October 3rd, 2009

((i love this topic, and hearing all the responses. New avatars are fun. i will admit that there have been a few times since i first started to use Twitter that i’ve accidentally skimmed past the “tweets” of a person whom i normally would read because i didn’t recognize their “new face”. Yes, changing your avatar can lead to temporary confusion for those who “follow’ you, but i think in the end, if what you’re saying matters to them, they’ll find you in the stream, and deal. :D ))

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printedproof

October 3rd, 2009

Oh that was you!? I was totally ignoring that person ;) . -Great work Diane. Its funny how easily our eys adapt to a symbol or trademark. That is just what our avatars are to us: our trademark or logo.

Just think about when a logo changes… its never that the new logo is less thoughful or less meaningful, its just different and our brains rather not have to adjust our image cache.

((By the way Meg is that really you?))

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George Spink

October 3rd, 2009

This is me, the real me, George!

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DirectGaming

October 3rd, 2009

Haha, That’s the beauty of using an Xbox Live Avatar! You can change it, but it still will always look like the exact same person!

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maczter

October 3rd, 2009

Great article. For the longest time, I had used a photo of a vinyl figure of a guy with baggy pants and a cardboard box on his head. This was fine on forums where people often use random images for their avatars, but once I became very active on Twitter and started interacting with a lot of people, I was getting several DMs per month from people wondering why I didn’t want to show my face. I finally caved and changed to my current avatar based on a photo my best friend took of me shortly after his first daughter’s birth last December. Once I switched to my “human” avatar, I saw a noticeable spike in new followers.

And I’ve been told by multiple people since switching the same thing you discovered the hard way…this avatar IS my brand now.

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Mandy Grover

October 3rd, 2009

Funny, I was contemplating a change since my avatar is a ‘thing’ and not a photo of me. But a follower recently left a very positive comment about it, so I naturally have second thoughts. If I change, I’ll somehow transition by including the old with the new. Compromise suits me.

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TheRichAnt

October 3rd, 2009

Change is good most times I like your first picture just because its a excellent photo of you. However as an artist I change my avatar whenever I create a new painting. As for the people I follow I look mostly for their name because a lot of people change their avatar. Some new pics are nice some mmm not so nice. However its not the reason I follow.

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Annaobrien

October 3rd, 2009

Like I said, changing my avatar benefited me, but I think it’s because the photo was more a reflection of the type of content i was sharing. I mean come on, I’m a data nerd.

Diana has it right, if your going to change you have to be prepared for hiccups and people forgetting who you are for awhile. Regardless of what anyone has said here, that’s the facts :)

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maczter

October 3rd, 2009

Just for grins (and because @damon challenged me to do so after I jokingly told him I was going to do so), I wrote a counter argument with a couple of reasons why everyone should instead change their avatars on every day of the week that ands in “Y”.

Enjoy (For entertainment purposes only): bit.ly/4LiMW

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Yoosuf

October 3rd, 2009

i am agree with your conclusin, becuose it happend to me to :)

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Robin Pernice

October 4th, 2009

This is kind of a hard one for me. When I first started on
Twitter I used an avatar very different than my current and upon arriving on my current used several..all of my own
image. Branding is very important..wrote a diddy on it, however change is just something that happens. It is the process of life. As you evolve personally and professionally why not be able to represent?? I realize change is hard for most all people but if we are not in a state of changing/growing then where we going? Love your new avatar BTW. Great post! Thought provoking!

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gypsygirl52

October 4th, 2009

IMHO you look much prettier as a redhead…much more striking color than bland blonde.Interesting Post!

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Phaoloo

October 4th, 2009

It is truly a disaster if you change to a new completely different avatar suddenly cos you’ll soon lost RTs.
But it is also an awesome way to spice up your stream and tell others that you are a real and up to date person such as changes for some special days.
I change every Friday, just make a slightly change and keep the crucial point of my avatar so that everyone can easily recognize me with the new avatar, and some even come by say hi and tell their thoughts about my new avatar.

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Prodigal

October 4th, 2009

I was fortunate enough to see the new avatar for the two seconds you were using it. I love them both, but I get what you’re saying. People complain when I change mine, too. I was always perplexed, but what you’re saying makes sense.

On branding, I sometimes see tweeps during the nightly worship without their avatars (blushing)and do NOT recognize them by their name alone. I then see their avatar and know instantly who they are.

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Susie Blackmon

October 4th, 2009

I update my photo at least once per year and so far it hasn’t been a problem (not to infer that I am a big brand of course!). However, I am an active Twitter user even though for all of my efforts, I continue to be MIA from Twitter search and their fixes only last a matter of hours.

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claudia

October 4th, 2009

I had not thought about this but it is true. We are a visual lot – we take our cues from this. I have lost products because I did not really know the name – just the packaging. I suppose I am stuck with my funny image. We get out avatars in a moments hasty thought and brand ourselves.
: )

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Darren Scott Monroe

October 4th, 2009

Great post Diana actually I am testing that every Sunday with rooting for the Bears every Sunday where I change my profile on Twitter (@darrenmonroe) and pic every Sunday.

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Suthnautr

October 4th, 2009

Shameless plug for (and thanks to) @FantoMaster for providing the link to this article (BTW Fantomaster has a great brand avatar).

The same thing happened to me that happened to you. I had changed my avatar about three times before settling on the one I’m using now. One of them caused a negative reaction – I liked it, but people said I was scary looking. I think that was the one where I’d replaced the background with a huge fireball explosion I’d downloaded from BigStockPhoto.com

I’m pretty sure I’m going to keep the one I’m using now – though it may seem odd when I turn 80 and the avatar is 30 years out of date. :)

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Jennifer

October 4th, 2009

I’m a goofball! I seen your new avi and was thinking, who is that! It was on UberTwitter! When Im on mobile I too, just look at the picture. So funny! I still liked you, and you felt familiar to me, I just didnt know who you were! I like to change my avi now and then as well, if I lose people for it, sad but oh well. I change, you change, we all change!

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Dennis Jernberg

October 5th, 2009

I guess I use my drawing hand as an avatar for a reason. A few, really: 1) I don’t have to change it whenever my hair changes 2) it’s almost logo-like in itself 3) I draw (though I haven’t posted yet; too busy with WriMos and songwriting contests). Even so, I am considering eventually changing switching from my hand to my face. That might change my following some, but it might be worth an experiment…

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[...] Think Twice Before Changing Your Avatar! « Bit Rebels [...]

Tom Zucker-Scharff (cyberdad)

October 5th, 2009

Diana,

I saw this on twitter and thought of our conversation when you changed your avatar. Then I read the article. We talked about changing your brand then and although I’m not totally convinced this is the way it is, it seems to lean that way. I keep wanting to change my avatar and not doing it b/c of this.

As I said originally I like both of your avatars, and would follow you no matter which you used. I think we should be following people not avatars.

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Alrady40

October 18th, 2009

I think you make a great point however there are ways to do it… make an announcement or have something included in photo that is consistent with new one (a prop).

Change gradually… .I think problem is in drastic changes. I have done drastic with a lot less followers without a problem. I have friends that follow on 2-3 ID’s and they have various avatars and they still like me (I hope). I always adjust in a few days to the drastic changes some of my friends make. :)

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Your Name

October 18th, 2009

I’m keeping, my cold blue metallic avatar just because so many ppl are use to it. I’d love to change it to my beautiful mug, but I’m stuck.

I’ve branded myself in social media with the name Zaibatsu and my avatar.

It’s working for me, abd I’ve tried to change before with a huge backlash from my followers.

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Dwyndal

October 19th, 2009

I agree with this post and hate the fact that personal branding does happen. Usually, we don’t mean for it to happen yet it does. Do you wear the same outfit as your avatar daily? Doubtful, unless you are Mr. Bean or Jeff Goldblum from the fly. The easiest solution would be shameless tweets about the change, but some may see this as a self serving request for RT or comments towards our own egos.

Me personally, i’m a man of changes. I use zany pics of myself to expres my attitude towards life and my surroundings. To have an avatar I used in the snow from last January is not very viable when i’m showing sun outside my window today. I think our biggest set backs is not changing enough and just tossing it out there. Your followers will get to know you by name and should brand you by both. And perhaps it would make them think twice about judging you; a book by it’s cover and not it’s content.

Change on!

~D

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Trudy Metzger

October 22nd, 2009

Maybe the best solution is to give your followers a heads up first, describing your new avatar to avoid unnecessary trauma. :)

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Lindsay Davies

November 14th, 2009

Great topic and post.
I think that changing an avatar (if it’s a photo) adds variety and creates more of a personality, as people can see what someone really looks like. Rarely does just one picture create a true representation as people change and some photos are better than others. If people were to meet in real-life, they are more likely to know each other if they have seen a variety of pictures. It seems more real to change an avatar rather than just have one look. Clearly some people don’t like it though.

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Charlotte

November 16th, 2009

Fascinating article and comments.

I love changing my avatar though I do so in response to the seasons and now I now feature hats as a trademark. I have to admit I have received only positive comments with each change – maybe because of having only a small following. It reflects me though because I bore easily and always want to make changes.

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Sasha Muradali

December 18th, 2009

oh dear. I change mine all the time.
Most of the time, I try to change it to something where it still looks like me…I never encountered what you did. That’s terrible!

I would have totally kept the blonde photo if I were you. It’s who you are now, why hold on the past. You are still you, a photo doesn’t change that. Those people being cruel did it for the sake of having something to say. If they really were interested in staying ‘friends’ with you — your photo wouldn’t matter at all.

:)

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Mark Fitzgerald

December 28th, 2009

Great article! I often think about updating my avatar but know the small throng that for whatever reason has decided to follow me might not understand the change from the flaming orange punk & urban hair to the conservitive next contestant on the batchlor look that I rock now! All in all I give them what they want, when it comes time for another book tour, major competetion, or live podcast with Adam Carolla at the Improv I’ll think survey my stalkers and get them involved with the evolution of my brand.

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Sebastian

January 26th, 2010

YES I totally understand – It has a LOT to do with your personality branding as by your tweets… you are social media brand. Unless you decide to go in a new direction you might want to rethink – I totally agree with the comment about Pepsi. They have changed their logos several times and frankly I don’t think it was a good decision… at all.

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Hadel

January 29th, 2010

Very true and interesting. If you notice, well for me, my eyes focuses first on the Avatar then I see what the twitter topic is. Good content comes from good people so our eyes focus on the Avatar. For me the change of Avatar was positive. Now what do I change it to next? ;-) Love this topic, thanks.

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