Will Marlow

Digital problem solving 

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Posterous

 

Results from Day 3 of Twitter Experiment (with Chart)

In 24 hours, I have lost another 100 followers.  (Remember, on the first night, I lost almost 2,000 followers, which must include all the people who use applications to auto-unfollow people who are no longer following them.)  As the chart shows, my follower count stands at 8,893.

Although it is still early to look at the results for RTs and @replies, here's something interesting to chew on: In the last 12 hours, I have been retweeted or @replied approximately 23 times on one post.  This is WELL ABOVE average, and a new record for any of my Tweets (my viral Tweets are typically retweeted three or four times).  

This surge of retweets can be explained by two things, I suspect.  First, as Twitter guru Guy Kawasaki (@guykawasaki) says, the best thing you can do to get retweeted is to Tweet good shit, and the Tweet that was responsible for almost all of the RTs and @replies was about how in just several days, the amount of money donated via text message to Haitian disaster relief has surpassed the total amount of money given to all charities and causes via text message last year. (That is interesting, and highly retweetable.) 

But the second explanation is that, as I guessed, Twitter reach is not dependent solely on maximizing the number of followers you have.  I had 12,700 followers on Monday.  Yesterday, I had 8,940 followers.  But after losing over 25% of my followers due to my own massive unfollowing, my Twitter reach (as measured simply by @replies and retweets) rose by a factor of more than 5x.

Prediction for the weekend: I still expect to see a more rapid loss of followers over the weekend, as some people tend to update their Twitter feeds only on Saturdays.

Will Marlow co-founded AlumniFidelity to help his clients reposition their fundraising to benefit from Web2.0 technology and marketing techniques. He’s working with clients such as UVA, the College of William & Mary, the University of Oklahoma, Bowling Green State University, Randolph Macon College, and he loves nothing better than a thorny marketing challenge.  Email him at will@alumnifidelity.com.

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Filed under  //   Followers   How to measure Twitter influence   Posterous   Twitter   Twitter Influence   Twitterholic   Unfollow   Unfollow Experiment  

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What to Expect

I have two separate blogs.  This (www.willmarlow.com) is my personal blog, and my posts here stem from my role as a co-founder of AlumniFidelity, and my experience operating a technology startup company.  

Before posting to this blog, I try to ask the following questions:

1. Would someone else who is working at a startup, a university, a nonprofit, or a boring corporation potentially find the information useful?
2. Is this something that I wish someone else had already written about? 
3. Is this post interesting enough that I would regret forgetting it?

The three questions above don't tell me what to write about, however.  They only tell me when I'm finished writing a post.  

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Filed under  //   Blog   Blog strategy   Posterous  

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Here's a 1-2-3 Guide to Adding a Favicon to Your Posterous Blog

I love Favicons, which are are the tiny (16x16 square images, to be specific) that appear in the URL, or in the browser link, or in the tab of your browser when your blog or website is being viewed.  

(If you want to see some examples of Favicons that may inspire you, here is a great catalogue of some of the best ones out there.) 

Even though the Favicon is a relatively minor part of your web site's visual experience, I have always thought that the Favicon goes a LONG way in making your web site or blog look polished.  

Which is why I was glad when my Posterous friends Rohan and Nischal tipped me off that it was possible to manually customize your Favicon on Posterous.  I opened up the code and successfully added my favorite Favicon (which you should be able to see now), and I thought I'd include the steps for anyone else to do the same thing.  

To change the Favicon on your Posterous blog, use the following steps:

1.  Select the image file you want to use for your Posterous Favicon.  Note: images MUST be square, and they MUST be 16x16 pixels. 
2.  Upload your 16x16 square image to the Web.  I uploaded my Favicon to my Flickr account here.  
3.  Take the image location (if you used Flickr like I did, you simply click "Share," then select "Grab the HTML, and copy the part of the code that ends in the ".jpg" or ".png" or whatever image file you used. 
4.  Then you'll need to "Enable Advanced Theming" for your Posterous blog, and by doing a "Find Replace," get rid of the default Favicon image, which is written like this: "/images/favicon.png," and replace it with the new Flickr image location.  
5.  Save changes and you're done.

I hope this post will help folks get even more out of their Posterous accounts.  Let me know if there is a better way to accomplish any of this, or if you have trouble following the steps I outlined. 

(Quick aside: I'm curious if Guy Kawasaki will soon change his Alltop page's Posterous Favicon.  I have always been interested by the way he and his company use Posterous; they have one of the most highly customized and impressive accounts I've seen, yet they put up with a generic little Posterous Favicon.)

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Filed under  //   Alltop   Favicon   Guy Kawasaki   Posterous   Social Media   Web development  

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This Is What It Looks Like to Get Kicked Off Twitter

Glad to be back ;)

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Filed under  //   Posterous   Suspended   Twitter   Will Marlow  

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