How To Determine Your Twitter Chances Of Hyperlocal Blogging Success In Your Town



There are so many Twitter statistics pages out there, that it’s hard to keep up with them. I should probably start a bookmark folder for all of them I stumble upon but I don’t. I guess that’s because I’m constantly switching back and forth between Safari browser & Firefox. I should get better organized. By the way, while I’m thinking about it, the new Safari browser sucks. I find bugs in it everyday. Firefox rules supremely. Ok, I got that out of my system.

Back to Twitter. I recently came across a new Twitter page called Twitterholic.com. Many of you may say, “Dude, where have you been?” Well, I’m sorry, I just found it. Twitterholic will rank you according to where you live, assuming you have it listed in your profile. The page tells me that I am ranked #1 for Monroe, NC. I use @stevesherron with my hyperlocal blog, Monroe NC. I thought that was pretty cool, but I already knew that I should rank near the top. I live in a small city on the outskirts of Charlotte, NC with a population of around 30,000. I’m constantly searching for people in my town or county to follow. My city has not yet jumped on the Social Media bandwagon. Slowly but surely, they are coming on board.

I see great power in Twitter in the future. No telling where Twitter will end up but I think it will be extremely valuable. I don’t have a billion, zillion followers but that’s ok. I have a little over 300 followers and honestly I don’t see how people obtain 15,000 followers when I check profile pages and websites. I see a lot of junk and it amazes me that they have so many followers. I wouldn’t follow most of these people if they were dropping $5 bills at the mall. Are these people on Twitter full time? Do they have a hired staff that spend all day following people in the hopes that people will follow back? When I come across one of these Twitterers with so many followers, I go check out their web site and peruse their tweets. I may go through a couple of pages to see what they are tweeting about to determine if I want to follow this individual. Rarely do I find such pearls of wisdom that makes me hit their follow button. Occasionally, but not often. I think most people are sheep that see such a massive following and through Twitter Hypnosis they are powerless as their twitter finger left clicks and they slowly exhale as if they just toked a joint. I don’t get it. Woo Hoo, I just became follower 31,973 to this person. I feel such a feeling of acceptance now. If I asked these sheep what the person’s name is, I doubt they could answer.

I thought I would do a little experiment here on bloggerlens. I’m assuming that most people who land here on this site has found me through some sort of search for hyperlocal blogs, hyperlocal blogging or citizen journalism. I would guess that at least some of the readers have their own hyperlocal websites or are considering starting one. Twitter must be in your game plan if you are going hyperlocal.

I thought I would take a random sample of my visitors from my stats and use ip addresses to determine who is the number one Twitter user in their area. I may actually follow some of these people if they are hyperlocal bloggers with my @hyperlocalblog Twitter name. What will this accomplish for me? I have no idea. I do think that one should work towards being the #1 Twitter user in their respected area. Let me make a disclaimer right now. I use my Twitter account for my Monroe Scoop website, @stevesherron, to socialize and gain friends. I use @hyperlocalblog to mostly post my articles from bloggerlens on Twitter.

All opinions that follow are exactly that, opinions. I don’t claim to be an expert on anything, just making a few observations along the way. If I offend anyone, well I’m sorry…grow up.

I’m using twellow.com to determine the top users in a particular city for my findings below.

Geographical visitors to bloggerlens determined by IP Adresses and the top Twitter users for that area.

Should these folks be going hyperlocal?

Greenville, S.C. Duncan C. Wierman is #1. @duncanwierman Over 41,000 followers. Not a hyperlocal blogger. It would be extremely hard to overtake this guy. Duncan actually followed me but I did not follow back. No way I could create a friendship online with Duncan. He’d never see me. He’s a real estate investor and I generally do not follow real estate people. His profile web site takes you to a landing page where he is trying to sell you his real estate course. He’s probably a very nice guy, but why would people follow him after they clicked his web page? He is using his Twitter power on a national level. Can you imagine his media power if he were to take it local?

*No user in top 10 for Greenville, SC appears to be a hyperlocal blogger. The #10 user in Greenville, SC has over 3000 followers. When I checked her blog, she mostly embeds YouTube videos from others and her feedreader shows 74 subscribers. Over 3000 followers and only 74 subscribers on her blog? WTH? This young lady appears to be some sort of designer and only has a paypal button on her blog. She should seriously consider re-directing her energy to hyperlocal blogging.

Moving on…

Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Mike Brenner is #1. @mikebrenner. Over 8000 followers. Mike is an artist and appears to own a gallery in Milwaukee. His web site listed in his Twitter profile. http://hotcakesgallery.com/. Mike’s website is weak for a gallery owner. I can’t buy anything from his web site. It doesn’t appear I could buy local advertising either. He should be directing all the locals in Milwaukee to his gallery from his Twitter page and become the cultural center of his town. He curses on his tweets. Bad move.

#10 in Milwaukee is a public radio station. @radiomilwaukee. Over 2500 followers and concentrates mostly on Milwaukee.

Moving on…

Platteville, Wisconsin. Andrew Brunner is #1 with 29 followers. @brunnerand. Website listed in his profile. http://www.uwpexponent.org/author/andrew-brunner/.

Population of Platteville listed around 10,000. Andrew, go hyperlocal brother. You could dominate after a while and probably take over the other communities close to you.

There are only 3 Twitterers listed for Platteville.

Moving on…

Port St. Lucie, Florida. Orrin Woodward is #1 with 47,000 followers. @orrin_woodward. Orrin is an author and a speaker. His web site listed on his profile page. Orrin Woodward. Orrin sells a book he authored on his blog through Amazon and embeds his and other YouTube videos. He doesn’t send out a ton of tweets. He puts out a lot of quotes from other famous people. I don’t really understand this. I think when people do this, it’s because they can’t really think of anything to tweet about. I’d rather see a twitpic of someone’s lunch than read a quote from an obscure author. He far overdoes the quotes. I would unfollow him. His best tweet after pages of searching? This twitpic of shark fishing. Now that’s what I’m talking about! Not sure how he inspired 43,000 followers. Who am I to say? I only have 300.

#10 is Port St. Lucie is a Pastor with 201 followers. @myministrybytes. As far as Twitter goes, hyperlocal is wide open in Port St. Lucie. Pastor Mike only follows 21 people. He will probably not be very successful at Twitter unless he increases the amount of people he follows. I rarely follow those with low follow counts and high follower counts. Pastor Mike does not list a web site. Pastor Mike could probably go hyperlocal religion in his community and build a tremendous following.

Moving on…still trying to find hyperlocal bloggers who are using Twitter effectively

Jacksonville, Fla. Robert Oliver is #1. @f4fanthom. 1482 followers with no web site listed on his profile. Robert is in home repairs and remodeling. Uses the standard Twitter avatar. Does not appear to use his Twitter account to do anything hyperlocal or build his own business. This totally does not make sense to me. No web site, no profile pic, nothing special about his tweets. I would never follow him but many sheep have. Robert should be driving hyperlocal customers to his own remodeling business instead of mindless tweets about affiliate marketing and contests.

#10 in Jacksonville, Fla is Jessica, @MsBoricua09 with 105 followers. No web site listed. Attention all people of Jacksonville, Fla…You could easily take over Jacksonville, Florida on Twitter and become a social media force in this city of over 1.3 million people. You are allowing a home remodeler with no web site and a standard Twitter avatar to school you. Someone in Jacksonville, please get off your ass and pick the fruit that awaits you.

Jeremy Cox is listed at #8, @Jeremy_Cox and should be dominating because he’s a local reporter. He’s got 158 followers and actually has hyperlocal tweets in his twitter stream. Jeremy, I’m screaming at you brother…take over Jacksonville, Florida for goodness sakes!

Moving on…

Jersey City, NJ. Maria Perez is listed as #1 with over 6700 followers. @profnet. Maria is a journalist and lists https://profnet.prnewswire.com/ as her web site in her profile. Maria appears to make a lot of hyperlocal tweets but not focused to her community necessarily. She has the experience and know how to dominate if she would focus strictly on her community but a lot of what she does appears to be on a national level also.

I’m going to jump to #12 in Jersey City. He is Zac Clark. @rockertycoon with 1150 followers. He runs a local rock music blog. He has local videos and photos. He’s got the right idea. He needs to get a wordpress blog and should cover even more of the local scenes. He should blog about the restaurant where the music is being played. He should blog about the drink specials and interview the owners. It wouldn’t take Zac long to be the #1 hyperlocal blogger in Jersey City with a niche like local rock music and restaurants.

Moving on…let’s do one more city that has previously visited bloggerlens.com.

Warwick, Rhode island. #1 is Practical Manifesta with over 1300 followers. @practicalmanife. Does not list his name on his Twitter page but has a picture of himself, I presume, on his Twitter background photo. This is stupid to not put your name. Whoever he is, he lists his web site on his profile as http://www.practicalmanifestations.com/. I visited his site and it’s a conglomeration of junk in my opinion. I saw nothing that would make me follow him if I were checking his web site listed on his profile. He’s into Universal Attraction. Must be working with 1300 followers and he doesn’t list his name. More sheep following I guess. His bio says follow me and I will follow you. No thanks dude. See if you can find his name anywhere. Pure snake oil it looks to me but he is #1 in Warwick.

#10 is RI Bridal Event with 324 followers. @specbridalevent. The website is listed as http://www.spectacularbridalevent.com/welcome.htm on their profile page. They specialize in bridal events in R.I. their web site looks nice and they are going hyperlocal in their niche. The tweets they put out are excellent in my opinion. They are mixed with a good focus on the bridal business. They understand what’s going on. If these folks decided to move to other niches in Warwick, they could dominate. I did a random sampling of their followers and they are for the most part very focused on their niche. This is probably the best example I have found today of hyperlocal examples and people using Twitter to their advantage.

I’m very surprised at my findings today. Once again, I’m not an expert at anything but the majority of the Twitter users I highlighted today are not using Twitter very effectively. Many are being followed by Twitter Sheep. Virtually every community in the USA is prime for a hyperlocal blogger of some sort. Restaurants, sports, news, charities, community videos…you name it. I’m a huge advocate of wasting time on the internet. I love to do that, but I also try to balance it with being constructive and building something useful for the future. Your community awaits you. No one in your local area can out-social media you unless you let them. Start a hyperlocal blog, even if it’s just in your neighborhood and join the revolution.

Copyright 2009 bloggerlens.com Hyperlocal Blogs & Citizen Journalism

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5 comments to How To Determine Your Twitter Chances Of Hyperlocal Blogging Success In Your Town

  • Ok, now that was a really cool exercise. In my Twitter profile, I list 2 geographic areas in an effort to span both. However, my Twitter has nothing to do with a hyperlocal blog.
    I am starting one (a local blog), however, that I will narrow down to a very specific town in my region. At that point, I will zero in with Twitter.
    Good news is that the Tweetups in my area already draw about 50 people and are growing. Good news for me.
    AL

  • Ok, now that was a really cool exercise. In my Twitter profile, I list 2 geographic areas in an effort to span both. However, my Twitter has nothing to do with a hyperlocal blog.
    I am starting one (a local blog), however, that I will narrow down to a very specific town in my region. At that point, I will zero in with Twitter.
    Good news is that the Tweetups in my area already draw about 50 people and are growing. Good news for me.
    AL

  • I’m trying, I really am, but . . . I can’t get excited about Twitter. I know, it is a great social tool, but I wonder for how long. You have 10 followers you might know who is doing what to whom, but you have 10 hundred followers, I don’t think so.

    To me Twitter is too much like a multilevel system. The leader–the one they are following on a particular Twitter site–he wiggles his tail and everyone else wiggles their tail. Whoop-ti-doo, I can’t get excited about that.

    However, I will try it out as a marketing tool. But not as a–God forbid– social organ.

  • I’m trying, I really am, but . . . I can’t get excited about Twitter. I know, it is a great social tool, but I wonder for how long. You have 10 followers you might know who is doing what to whom, but you have 10 hundred followers, I don’t think so.

    To me Twitter is too much like a multilevel system. The leader–the one they are following on a particular Twitter site–he wiggles his tail and everyone else wiggles their tail. Whoop-ti-doo, I can’t get excited about that.

    However, I will try it out as a marketing tool. But not as a–God forbid– social organ.

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