Manage Your Online Savoir Faire

Savoir faire:
A polished sureness in social settings

Indelible or invisible?
You know the adage about first impressions. People are always making quick assessments of you or your brand based on how you look, what you say, and what you do. Eyebrows may raise, ears may perk up, or you may be completely ignored. Even a non-reaction is a reaction. Unless you’re surveying your audience on a regular basis, you may not even realize the impressions you’re making, or consider their impact, good or bad.
An impressive following
Think about how this applies on Twitter—how you form impressions and make snap judgments about who you do or don’t follow. It usually starts with them following you, or recommendations from those you trust. How often do you check out the Tweeter before you follow them—their content, name, URL, bio, and, yes, their background image?
Care enough to do a background check
A small online poll provided these nuggets of information about who checks out backgrounds:
• 50% of respondents said they view background pages often, 28% said sometimes, for a total of 78% who view background pages.
• 73% of respondents use a Twitter app such as TweetDeck, Seesmic, or HooteSuite that normally precludes them from viewing an individual’s Twitter background image.
• Based on the total number of respondents who said they view background pages often or sometimes, 75% leave an app to do so.
• The remainder, slightly more than 24%, view Tweets—and backgrounds—in web view mode.
One respondent’s comment underscores the numbers:
“I use Seesmic Desktop and occasionally Seesmic Web. Still prefer to look at Twitter Web when evaluating followers and potential follows.”
Although the sample size was small and the poll was simple, it underscores the importance of a web background as the first step to a strong online brand in Twitter. That brand is the first and sometimes only impression potential followers get. That split second impression could impact the next rung of your success, no matter how you personally define it.
Image: alainelorza


