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Retweeting: Day Six of #MMJC10DoT

You’ve send a few tweets over the last five lessons – hopefully you’ve found plenty in your everyday routine which would be of interest to others, whether they are your student colleagues, peers in your field, or others.

But it really would be hard work to generate all the material yourself to feed your followers with regular, interesting tweets! Fortunately, you don’t have to – you can retweet the tweets of others. It’s sort of like forwarding an email, but to everyone who’s following you. They see the content of the original tweet, who it came from originally, and perhaps also a contextualising comment from you. By doing this, you’re performing a valuable service:

  • to your followers, by sifting the stream of information available to them, filtering out what’s potentially interesting to them, and also by making them aware of potential new contacts they can add to their network. They may already follow the person you’ve retweeted, in which case you’re bringing their attention to something they may have missed the first time. They may not yet follow the original tweeter, in which case, you’ve made available to them information they may not have had access to, and given them a new contact to follow.
  • to the people you follow, by amplifying their message and spreading it outside their network (and also possibly putting them in touch with new contacts)
  • and of course, you’re displaying to others that you’re well connected to interesting and important people, and that you are a discerning judge of what information is interesting and significant!

How to retweet

This is super easy — just go to the little retweet button at the bottom of the tweet you want to share. (It looks like a two-arrow recycling symbol.) Click on the button and you’ll see something like this:

example of a retweet / quote tweet button

If you pick “Retweet” the tweet will now appear in the timeline, with a little note above it that includes the retweet icon and says “User Name Retweeted”

To retweet with comment:

This is easy. Hit the “Quote Tweet”, add your acknowledgement or context, and then Tweet.

The great thing about this is you can add your own content and get around the 280-character limit. It also enables you to maintain the integrity and context of the original Tweet. Here’s a sample of something I retweeted from Sam’s feed:

rt-withcomment

Remember that to use Twitter effectively to promote your own work, you need to update frequently with interesting content to gain a following, and you also need to reciprocate and promote the work of others. No one wants to read or retweet a Twitter feed which is just broadcasting announcements about itself!

Finally, if you want to reply to someone, but you want everyone to see the original tweet, you can retweet yourself.

Also, remember there should be variety. Nobody wants to see an endless stream of retweets either. It’s all about the mix and the conversation.

The other thing I like about retweeting with comment is that it makes it easier to retweet a thread.

What’s a thread, and how to make one

If you’re looking to extend the abilities of Twitter with a longer “essay-like” Twitter thread, here are the instructions from the Twitter help pages on the subject:

How to create a twitter thread

So have a look at your twitter stream and see if you can find tweets you think your followers might be interested in – a digital tool, an item of news, a new blog post or publication someone’s tweeted about, a comment you agree with…and start retweeting! Advanced: make a thread!