Lists Are an Awesome New Twitter Feature

Like many of you I’ve been playing around with Twitter Lists over the last few weeks. This new feature has captured my imagination on many levels. While I certainly haven’t figured out all the ways to use Lists, I thought I’d share what I’ve been doing – maybe it will spark ideas for you. And I’d love to hear what you think of Twitter Lists and how you’ve been using them.

Lists allow me to selectively organize people I follow… Every time I follow someone, I try to assign them to one or more of my Lists. I wish I’d been able to do that from day one. I’m trying to go back and list folks I’m already following, and if you can think of an efficient way to do that, please share.

… Allowing me to focus better on what people are saying. When I have extra time I peruse one of my Lists – for example my Writers List – and go in depth on what’s happening in that area of interest.

I’m trying Lists as a way to step up Follow Friday. Last week I tweeted my Lists – for example, my SEO List – to share more of my favorite follows. Good idea?

Lists help me decide who to follow. When I look at a person or organization’s profile page and see that they are on a few or several Lists, that’s a very positive sign. It tells me this person is involved in Twitter, not just taking up space or spamming. Presumably people wouldn’t put you on a List unless you were contributing useful and/or entertaining content. As an example, take a look at the profile page of Meryl K. Evans – impressed?

Lists help me find great new follows. When I peruse a List put together by someone I respect – for instance, Meryl K. Evans’ Marketing List – that leads me to people I want to connect with.

Lists pressure me to write better Tweets. I’m on a few Lists myself, and for me that’s a real honor. If someone thinks enough of me to more carefully track and generously share what I’m writing, well, that inspires me to write more informatively and thoughtfully.

Inclusive Twitter Lists or Exclusive Twitter Lists?

Jan Geronimo wrote a fascinating post about selectivity on Twitter Lists. Should your Lists include everybody you know in a given category, or just the cream of the crop? For me, the issue is not as pressing, since I’m fairly selective about people I follow to begin with. So my thinking at the moment is, make my Lists inclusive and let others judge for themselves who the “best” are.

Future Development of Twitter Lists?

Over to You

What new features would you like to see on Twitter Lists? How have you been using them so far?
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