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Twitter 101 | A Refresher In @ Replies

02/26/2010 - 1:00 am By Diana Adams

I decided to write this article after my very dear friend Tina @CtKscribe and I were talking yesterday about how we are seeing more and more people on Twitter that seem to not understand how the @ replies work. We thought a quick refresher course might help a lot of newcomers to Twitter as well as be a nice reminder to people that may have forgotten.

Don’t feel dumb if you don’t know this information. I was giggling because when I sat down to write this post I realized that even though I’ve been on Twitter for a year and have over 25,000 followers; I didn’t know this information for sure either. I had to consult my friend Calvin @mayhemstudios, and he very patiently walked me through it, so don’t think you are alone if you don’t know! We can all benefit from the “get back to basics” kind of information every now and then.

When you send a tweet on Twitter that begins with an @ symbol, the only people who will see that tweet are the ones that follow you and the person you are sending it to. That is all.

The reason this is relevant is because @CtKscribe and I (and probably many others) have noticed more and more people sending RTs and their #FollowFriday recommendations, etc… with tweets beginning with that @ symbol, and those people probably do not realize that the majority of their followers are not seeing that information.

If you want all of your followers to see the tweet, you must begin the tweet with something other than the @, which can be a word, an RT, a hashtag, a period (have you seen the little dots in front of the @ sign sometimes?) – there are all kinds of creative ways to send a tweet that include an @ symbol that will get to all of your followers.

These are examples of tweet variations that will be visible to all your followers because none of these tweets begin with an @ symbol -

RT @mistygirlph: The Recipe For A Successful Blog! http://ow.ly/1buKJ
The Recipe For A Successful Blog! http://ow.ly/1buKJ via @mistygirlph
I love this —> The Recipe For A Successful Blog! http://ow.ly/1buKJ by @mistygirlph
.@mistygirlph, thank you, I really liked this – The Recipe For A Successful Blog! http://ow.ly/1buKJ

If you were to send the tweet in this format, it would only be seen by people that follow you and @mistygirlph -

@mistygirlph: The Recipe For A Successful Blog! http://ow.ly/1buKJ

The same goes for your #FollowFriday recommendations and any other tweets that you send. I thought this tweet below was so nice and I wondered if the person that sent it knew that the only people that would see it would be people that were already following me anyway because it began with an @ symbol. If she began the tweet with the #FF, then all of her followers would have seen it. -

@adamsconsulting #FF she’s a friend and a writer for BitRebels.com & InkRebels.com

The question you are probably going to ask next is what if you RT someone that has protected (private) tweets. Who exactly will see those? I don’t have the answer for that, I’ve heard conflicting information. Maybe someone that knows this will leave a comment here with the correct answer. I RT my very funny friend, @sc430girl, who has protected tweets and I have no idea who can actually see them.

The important thing to remember is that as we grow our visibility on Twitter, it is important that we also grow our knowledge for how to effectively communicate with our followers. I hope this little reminder was helpful and please let everyone know your tips also in the comments below. I’ll see you on Twitter! w00t!

More Articles By Diana Adams | Articles: 723

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.


36 Comments

PixelDiva

February 26th, 2010

I wonder if you can Tweet/Reply to a specific Twitter List?

[Reply]

Diana Adams Reply:

I think that is possible, but I don’t know how to do it, I’ll look into it and let you know if I find anything. ;)

[Reply]

Monique

February 26th, 2010

Thank you Diana.
This is my twitterday, I have twitter for months and did not know how it works, you’ve helped me

Monique

[Reply]

Diana Adams Reply:

Oh.. Monique.. I’m so happy to hear that. That means more to me than you know. Happy tweeting!

[Reply]

Misty Belardo

February 26th, 2010

Diana this is such a must article for people to read!! truly helpful!! :)

[Reply]

J.M. Waters

February 26th, 2010

I’ve been using Twitter for a bit now and am ashamed to say I did not know this. Thank you for the information. I guess I need to go back and tweet my #FollowFriday from this morning again…the correct way!

Keep up the great work!

J.M. Waters
@mikewaters

[Reply]

Ct Kingston

February 26th, 2010

Diana, first of I’m glad we had the talk, allowing me to blow off my ‘faux steam’ ;) Secondly thanks so much for writing this. And so sweet of you to mention me, the faux-steamer @CTK1…

3rd…This is a nicely lucid and needed post since quite a few aren’t aware of the @ replies and often it has a lot to do with the timing of when they joined Twitter.

Back in the day (circa 2009) I can recall the outrage expressed in the stream over Twitter’s new change of @ replies. The hash tag was #TwitterFail. After a few days passed many forgot all about it. Touché.

A refresher course is fantastic.
I’m saving this link and keeping it handy to send to anyone who may need a helping hand! Cheers Diana!

[Reply]

Diana Adams Reply:

Tina, you are so darn funny, what am I going to do with you? Haha! Yeah, I remember the “circa 2009″ #TwitterFail craziness. You are right, it all came and went very fast. I’m so glad that you and I got to chat the other night about this, because I think it will help a lot of people, I know it helped me. ~hugs~

[Reply]

David Weedmark

February 26th, 2010

A great reminder, thanks. I’ve been on Twitter for two years now and had NO IDEA. Or if I did, I long since forgot. And yet, even with this new-found knowledge, I do believe its easier and less embarrassing to simply blame the person you are sending the message to. Hey. If more people were following you, then more people would have seen my tweet, right? Right?
Yeah, I thought so.

@davidweedmark

[Reply]

@bonniessquires

February 26th, 2010

Hello Diana

Nice reminder. I seen the dots in front
of the tweets and finally got up the nerve
to ask why the dots so i new that one.

I’ve to say I laughed when I seen this post
because it brought back some reminders of a friend
of mine. Who has a bad habit of tweeting @bonnie
but that isn’t me and for awhile I kept telling the person I was sorry she got the wrong @. lol

Bonnie

http://twitter.com/bonniessquires

[Reply]

Anita Nelson

February 26th, 2010

If you RT a person who has protected tweets, the tweet you retweeted can be seen by all of your followers, thus making that tweet no longer “private”. So it is imperative to be very careful what information you RT from a friend’s protected account. #FFs are usually fine ;-P

Hope that helps! I wrote an article on that before, but perhaps it’s time for a refresher on that, too!
Great post, as always, Diana!
x0x
Anita @ModelSupplies

[Reply]

Anita Nelson Reply:

I should add that not only does the retweeted tweet of the person with protected tweets become no longer “private” when it is RTed by someone with a public account; but that tweet is now on the page of a public account, making it visible to anyone who visits the URL of that account, e.g. http://twitter.com/ModelSupplies <~ Those straightforward URLs can be visited by people who are not even registered at Twitter, so extremely public!

So be careful what you RT when your friend's account is protected =)
x0x
Anita @ModelSupplies

[Reply]

Ct Kingston Reply:

So true Anita. In general it seems most have great etiquette on the RT’ing a person’s private account. Tends to be something funny they’ve said, a quote or a good link to something. However recently a pal of mine got in hot water over this very thing. Oddly enough he may even be reading this reply ;-)

Thing is though, we often forget to even notice the tiny “lock” next to a person’s name. I know I do.

[Reply]

Diana Adams Reply:

Wow, thank you Anita and Tina for all the great information. I’ve learned a lot because I had no idea about this. I can’t thank you enough, really. Have a wonderful weekend!

Nicole @NikkiD66 Reply:

So, yeah, I’m a little late to the refresher course party, but thankfully I did already know these!

This is helpful information to help out Twitter,as usual, Diana! Thanks also Anita and Tina for the info. All three of you made the information completely clear and easy to digest.

I have a friend who has protected his tweets and I simply asked him via DM if it was okay to retweet his tweets. He said to go for it and I sure have!

Russ Bastable

February 26th, 2010

Based on a couple of comments I think it is still not completely understood!

If I Tweet:
@adamsconsulting Hey Diana! I love your articles more than I love life itself!

It will be seen by Diana and those who follow BOTH me AND Diana. It is not enough to follow one of us, it has to be both!

Correct me if I’m wrong, ignore me if that was already clear, and follow me if you just want to be able to see me overstate my great fondness for Diana’s articles! :)

[Reply]

Diana Adams Reply:

Russ, you are so sweet! Yes, you are correct, if you tweet that, for someone to see that, they have to follow both of us. ;)

If you send a tweet that doesn’t start with an @, then all of your followers can see it.

Thank you for your kind words. #YouRock

[Reply]

Brent ~ the roseman

February 27th, 2010

Huh, I had no idea. Is there anything else I should know?…. :)

[Reply]

Diana Adams Reply:

You’ll learn it all in good time young twitter grasshopper. ;)

[Reply]

Brent ~ the roseman Reply:

I, your “young” Padawan, am learning and (in a James Earl Jones voice…) Soon I will be the master. (sound of lightsaber firing up) :D

[Reply]

Saschakeet

February 27th, 2010

Your tweets are very helpful and I appreciate the links.

With all due respect however, you should correct the incorrect statement in your article. The commenter who says that someone must follow both users in order to see a tweet is correct. And I’m kinda-sorta surprised at a professional writer who consistently gets her pronouns wrong. It’s “people who may have forgotten.” People are whos, not thats.

[Reply]

Reply To Troll Reply:

With all due respect you should get a job. Being a troll is NOT a job.

[Reply]

Diana Adams Reply:

Wow, I really do appreciate your comment and I’m sure you did not intend to type that to come across as mean as you did. As you know, it’s not what you say, it’s how you say it.

I’d like to clear this up once and for all. The “people who” vs “people that” debate is a far more gray area than you obviously realize.

According to the American Heritage Dictionary, and I’m quoting here:

“It is entirely acceptable to write either the man that wanted to talk to you, or the man who wanted to talk to you.”

My source: The American Heritage College Dictionary. Third edition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1993, page 1540.

So, unless you think the American Heritage Dictionary is a non credible source, you can get off that soap box now.

Best wishes.

[Reply]

danoprey

March 3rd, 2010

I only worked this out yesterday, but good to get the clarification! I’m surprised this isn’t mentioned more.

To clear it up a bit more though (I got confused by this for a second) you could add:

“ones that follow BOTH you and the person you are sending it to” in the first bold sentence.

But maybe I’m just dumb.

[Reply]

Diana Adams Reply:

That’s a great idea! Haha! No, you aren’t dumb at all! LOL Hey, if you are dumb, then I’m super dumb. Oh, and I just followed you on Twitter. :)

[Reply]

GoGoAnita

March 3rd, 2010

Great to know – Reading the comments opened my eyes to the additional information. Thanks as @CTK1 says
“This is a nicely lucid and needed post”. Thanks again! I’ll be RTing this post.

[Reply]

[...] Twitter 101 | A Refresher In @ Replies by Diana Adams [...]

Mike Morucci

April 5th, 2010

1) This is why it’s cool to retweet older posts, for folks like me that missed them in his timeline the first time through.

2) I learned (though don’t always practice) never type anything (tweet, email, blog, private tweet, email with confidential tag, etc.) you wouldn’t say directly to another.

3) I’ve had to learn by trial & error many of the points you’ve made here. Your clarifications, and the commentary, does me a world of good!

4) Diana, Tina and Anita are the coolest.

Thanks!

[Reply]

Gurukarm (@karma_musings)

April 14th, 2010

Diana, I’m seriously old-school here (first of all) because every time I see “person that” my mind automatically substitutes “person who” ;-) – it’s not you, it’s me!

And secondly, it’s great that Richard re-tweeted this link again today. @Shoq has been on this case ever since last year when Twitter first made the change in @ reply behavior, and I, myself, am now in the habit of nearly always putting a period at the beginning of any @ reply that’s not an RT.

Silly Twitter – don’t you know what we say is of interest to ALL our followers?? ;-)

[Reply]

SirenOfFire

April 17th, 2010

this was so helpful thank you!
@SirenOfFire

[Reply]

Bex

May 8th, 2010

Wow I never knew that if it started with @username it didnt show to everyone :S. I think i’ll go check my tweets out. Thanks for the heads up :) .

[Reply]

barbarajackson@mail15.com

May 10th, 2010

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[Reply]

Frank Woodman Jr

July 12th, 2010

Another great article Diana. And one that finally clears up this whole @ thing for me.

It really should be that a Tweet/RT goes to everyone unless you mark it differently but that’s not how it is and it’s impossible to easily know this from anything Twitter shares with you.

Anyway it was quite a while after starting with Twitter that I found out this little hidden issue after reading an article in another newsletter.

This article however failed to fully make it clear what the difference was between the two groups are that would see any Tweet/RT starting with an @.

I know that it sure made a difference in how many of my tweets were RTed or commented on once I started putting a period in from of my @’s.

That stands to reason since by using a simple period before the @ sign I was reaching ALL of my followers not just the limited number that follow both myself and the person I was Tweeting/RTing. Remember for many followers that could be just you and that person. Not much reach or klout tweeting that way.

So thanks once again for sharing your hard learned tips with us all. That is truly the Twitter spirit.

Oh by the way a good article on Twitters 2000 ceiling and how this whole Twitter follower/following issue should be addressed would be nice. I’ve not seen anything I trust that discusses that issue so that I’m able to understand it.

And if I side with you on the who,that issue (which I do by the way) does that get me a follow from you. Those are so hard to get… :-)

[Reply]

lenen

August 4th, 2010

Over de voor- en nadelen van het afsluiten van een lening zonder BKR-toetsing.

[Reply]

hypotheek

August 12th, 2010

Bereken zelf uw hypotheek. Hypotheek berekenen? Maak snel een indicatieve berekening van het maximale leenbedrag van uw hypotheek.

[Reply]

Forum Avatars

August 12th, 2010

I liked seeing this, do you have a Facebook page for this site?

[Reply]

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