Twitter Lists – Making Sense of Twitter

Twitter lists are a fairly recent option on Twitter, but I have just not had the time to explore their use until yesterday. Now that I have checked them out I want to share with you how easy they are to use and why you should use lists on Twitter.

First it is simple to set up and add to a Twitter List. Here’s how:

1. Go to your follower page on Twitter. To the right you will see a few icons, one looks like a list. Right click on the icon and a menu drops down. From here you can create a list or simply tick next to an existing list to add that follower to a specific list. You will have the option to make the list private or public. Private is for your use only. Public allows others to actually subscribe to your special list and follow who you are following on your “short list”.

2. Set up list to group your followers. Some of my lists are clients, team members, SEO stars (people in my industry who are interesting to follow), and Interesting people. Those are just my lists, the ways you sort your own Twitter followers is totally up to you.

3. Then work your follower list and sort your followers by list. I have over 900 followers and it took me about 15 minutes to sort them. Not everyone is on a list. People who I really liked to read I have now been able to reconnect with as their tweets had been hidden in the “pile”.

4. Now this is the best part as far as I am concerned. Now add your lists to HootSuite with one click. Just select to add a new column in HootSuite and select the list you want to have appear in the column.

What Twitter lists do for me is to allow me to really watch people who I want to watch by pulling their Tweets into a separate section both on Twitter and on other applications like HootSuite.

Some of you who are reading this post may say “that’s why I use TweetDeck!”, but if you are like me and manage many Twitter accounts for clients TweetDeck simply doesn’t cut it. You can only see one profile at a time try to manage five or six full Twitter accounts with all the columns needed and you will see TweetDeck is just too restrictive. This is why for me HootSuite is best. I can set up a separate HootSuite account for each client and view all information when I want to and now can follow lists of top followers for each client.

If you are just managing your own Twitter account, TweetDeck is fine and in fact Twitter Lists are really a “knock off” of the features that have made TweetDeck so popular and the reason why many people have flocked to TweetDeck. With Twitter embracing lists other applications like HootSuite are now able to show this functionality that make sense of all the tweets you get when you are active on Twitter.