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You are here: Home / Online Collaboration / Why I do not love Twitter

Why I do not love Twitter

April 9, 2011 by RDesprez 4 Comments

Tweet

I don’t love Twit­ter. There, I’ve said it. Why?

First, because it con­tributes to a del­uge of infor­ma­tion that is so preva­lent in our soci­ety. Newsweek mag­a­zine recent­ly pub­lished an inter­est­ing arti­cle about how many of us are suf­fer­ing from “infor­ma­tion fatigue.” As a soci­ety, many of us are exposed to more and more infor­ma­tion. Social media, e‑mails, adver­tise­ments, junk mail, tele­vi­sion, radio, and news­pa­per and mag­a­zines offer us an unpar­al­leled amount of news and enter­tain­ment. But all these choic­es can lead to “infobe­si­ty” (see my relat­ed blog post). Most of us think that more choice is a good thing but when peo­ple are faced with too many choic­es they make no decision.

Here’s one exam­ple cit­ed in Newsweek. “In a 2004 study, Sheena Iyen­gar of Colum­bia Uni­ver­si­ty and col­leagues found that the more infor­ma­tion peo­ple con­front­ed about a 401(k) plan, the more par­tic­i­pa­tion fell: from 75 per­cent to 70 per­cent as the num­ber of choic­es rose from two to 11, and to 61 per­cent when there were 59 options. Peo­ple felt over­whelmed and opt­ed out.”

Those peo­ple who sol­diered on and attempt­ed to make a deci­sion often make poor­er choic­es. Researchers found that peo­ple exposed to too much infor­ma­tion “reach cog­ni­tive and infor­ma­tion overload…They start mak­ing stu­pid mis­takes and bad choic­es because the brain region respon­si­ble for smart deci­sion mak­ing has essen­tial­ly left the premises.”

Sec­ond, the stream of Tweets is relent­less. Accord­ing to the Newsweek arti­cle, researchers also found that “recent infor­ma­tion” ham­pers our abil­i­ty to make good deci­sions. “We pay a lot of atten­tion to the most recent infor­ma­tion, dis­count­ing what came earlier…We’re fooled by imme­di­a­cy and quan­ti­ty and think it’s qual­i­ty,” says Eric Kessler, a man­age­ment expert at Pace University’s Lubin School of Busi­ness. “What starts dri­ving deci­sions is the urgent rather than the important.”

Third, I don‘t love Twit­ter because most of the posts are, well, bor­ing. I don‘t care about what peo­ple had for lunch.

Fourth, lack of time. I don‘t have a lot of free time after work­ing full time, par­ent­ing, attempt­ing to exer­cise a few times a week, and keep­ing up with friends and fam­i­ly. I hard­ly watch any tele­vi­sion. So I don‘t under­stand how peo­ple have time to fol­low more than 700 indi­vid­u­als on Twit­ter. I used to think Twit­ter was the social media plat­form for teenagers. But accord­ing to a sta­tis­tic from last year, more than 45 per­cent of Twit­ters users are 18 to 34 years old and 24 per­cent are 35 to 49 years old (website-monitoring.com from May 2010).

To sum­ma­rize, I think Twit­ter has val­ue when it‘s used in cer­tain sit­u­a­tions (check out the recent blog post I wrote about inte­grat­ing Twit­ter with tech­ni­cal doc­u­men­ta­tion). But in gen­er­al, it con­tributes both to the del­uge of infor­ma­tion (most of it not very inter­est­ing or use­ful) and to the con­tin­u­ous real-time onslaught of infor­ma­tion that is con­sid­ered recent. Hav­ing said all that, I am going to try to use it more in 2011 to reach out to oth­er tech­ni­cal writ­ers. Just don‘t expect me to love it.

Filed Under: Online Collaboration, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Social Media, Technology Tagged With: deluge of information, online collaboration, Twitter

Comments

  1. Lisa Saunders says

    March 17, 2012 at 4:50 pm

    I com­plete­ly agree. I had a Twit­ter account for about a week and turned it off. It made me feel overwhelmed!

    Reply
  2. Robert Desprez says

    March 17, 2012 at 4:50 pm

    Thanks for the com­ment Lisa!

    Reply
  3. helseykc says

    March 17, 2012 at 4:51 pm

    I do agree — to a degree. In the last week or two I have final­ly got round to becom­ing a bit more active on Twit­ter. But ONLY at work. I use Face­book to keep in touch with friends — I signed up there to post pho­tos of my chil­dren to friends who were inter­est­ed in them, thus abat­ing the need to send a gazil­lion enor­mous emails every time they did some­thing (I thought was) cute!

    But on Twit­ter I only fol­low and post work relat­ed stuff. Most peo­ple don’t tell me what they had for lunch or that they’re sit­ting on a bus. I have found many use­ful links to arti­cles which con­tain work relat­ed infor­ma­tion. I only fol­low about 20 peo­ple — that does include my hus­band (I found out more about his work­ing day through twit­ter than he tells me at home — hmmm, issues?! ;)) and a cou­ple of non work relat­ed friends who do post inter­est­ing things.

    Sooooo I too suf­fer from infor­ma­tion over­load but tai­lor these tools to your own uses and they CAN be quite use­ful. If some­one starts post­ing non­sense or bor­ing stuff, unfol­low them. I’m sure they won’t be offend­ed! (Unless it’s your husband/wife!)

    Reply
  4. Robert Desprez says

    March 17, 2012 at 4:52 pm

    Some good sug­ges­tions! Thanks for post­ing a comment!

    Reply

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About Robert Desprez

I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at some of British Columbia's largest high-tech firms. I have served in leadership positions for the Society for Technical Communication and have worked as a writing instructor at Vancouver's Simon Fraser University.

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