twitter: an introduction for librarians

Post on 08-May-2015

413 Views

Category:

Technology

4 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Veronica Rutter, New City Libraryvrutter@rcls.org

• Blogging emerged in the late nineties. • Text messaging rises in popularity c.2005 • Jack Dorsey of the podcasting company Odeo proposed the

merging of text messaging with blogging.  • March 21, 2006, Dorsey sends the first tweet 'just setting up

my twttr'.  The product was originally called twittr to mimic the Flickr. 

• Like many internet products, Twitter started in the hands of teens. It rapidly rose in popularity among adults. 

Tweet- To send a message to Twitter. It must be 140 characters or less including all punctuation and spaces. Past tense: tweeted.

Retweet- the re-posting of an interesting tweet from another twitterer. Hash tag- A way of organizing Tweets for Twitter search engines. Users simply prefix a message with a community driven hash tag to enable others to discover relevant posts. i.e. I'm going to #cil2010.

Follower- Someone who has subscribed to your account.  Fail Whale- The endearing picture of a whale that informs you Twitter is down.  

The Iran election brought tremendous media attention to Twitter. It was nearly the only way information was getting out of the country.

The Mars Phoenix Lander tweeted about the discovery of ice on Mars.

Blame Drew’s Cancer

The most common approach is listing upcoming events and closures. This acts much like an RSS feed.

Others utilize Twitter as an extension of the reference desk, answering questions posed to them.

Twitter can also work as an entrance point. Provide shortened links to other articles, pictures and videos around the internet.

The largest library following on Twitter goes to NYPL with over 30,000 followers. ◦ Houston Public Library comes in second with

5,000 followers. Locally, Nyack Library has a very lively

Twitter feed with 86 followers. This may not seem like a lot, but the numbers are much stronger than the average followers on a local Facebook page.

Twitter updates should be pithy summations of a larger idea.

Links are always appreciated. Twitter readers don’t necessarily want to stop at 140 characters.

Go light on netspeak. You don’t want to sound like a lolcat. ◦ Good Tweet: The Nyack Library is closed today,

Friday February 26th. http://bit.ly/9z2Fgh◦ Bad Tweet: omg srsly, we rly r closed.

Yes! It’s always a good idea to have a presence. ◦ However. You must commit. Twitter users thrive

on continuous updating. If you want to create a Twitter account to play around with try a personal account first.

Have a goal. That goal should not be amount of followers. ◦ Create a new way to update people on events. ◦ Post links to reviews on Summer Reading books. ◦ Reach parents in a place they already spend a lot

of time.

Questions? Comments?

These slides will be posted on Slideshare.

You can e-mail me at vrutter@rcls.org.

top related