{ Twitter Users Say List Up the People! }

Twitter lists are all the rage and bring lists of “people” into the mainstream. Many are predicting that it no longer matters how many followers you have but how often you appear in lists. So add me – @calcBob – to your list right now. Ok, stop looking at all your tweets and let’s continue…

Categorizing or grouping  people is so easy and natural to us that we do it without even thinking. Who needs to be in today’s “Meeting”? Who are my “Customers”? Who do “I Need to Call Today”? And in the twitter world; who are “Influential Marketing Bloggers” or who is “Associated with Nonprofits”?

My focus the last seven years has been on how we can use “people” lists. As the inventor of calculating lists I can tell you lists of people can be very powerful for any business. Calc{list}® does for contacts what twitter lists are doing for tweeters – they both answer our “Who” questions.

 

Benefits and Parallels of Twitter Lists and Calc{list}

Twitter lists are a hit because categorizing tweeters makes it easy to follow a specific group’s activities. You can use other people’s lists and they do all the work. This is huge! Need a list of great accountants? Find someone maintaining just such a list.

Ayelet Noff, contributor to The Next Web blog, has a very keen insight into the potential of people lists. In fact, she believes twitter lists are revolutionary. Her post “The Brilliance of Twitter Lists and Suggestions for Improvement” suggests many of the features already incorporated into calc{list}.

One of her suggestions is to be able to combine lists. With calc{list} you can combine lists but what’s even better is that lists are dynamic and can calculate!

In the twitter world this would be something like:

  • @myname/no-fluff-tech (   @louisgray/toptechbloggers + @technabob/cool-gadget-sites   ) - @Scobleizer/tech-company-executives

In the contact world calc{list}’s calculating lists can be used for contact-based activities like email marketing:

  • {Newsletter} = ( {Customers} + {Prospects}  ) – {Opt-Out}

The “dynamic” part is that when a new contact is added to the {Prospect} list the newsletter is re-calculated to instantly reflect the change. Ultimately, both contact and twitter lists have many uses.

Twitter List Uses

Mashable’s Sarah Evans:10 Ways You Can Use Twitter Lists

  1. Industry Peers and Professionals Lists
  2. Experts Lists
  3. Recognize and Reward Customers Lists
  4. Niche Lists
  5. Employee Directory Lists
  6. Political Campaign Lists
  7. Location-Based Lists
  8. Event Attendees and Live-Tweeters Lists
  9. Self-Serving Lists
  10. Promote Your Affiliation Lists

Duct Tape Marketing by John Jantsch:5 Reasons to Use the New Twitter List Feature

  1. Monitor without following
  2. One button list follow
  3. Promote your lists
  4. Filtered by an expert
  5. Build a bigger following

Calc{list} Calculating Contact Lists

  1. Marketing Campaign Lists Management
  2. Email Marketing List Segmentation
  3. Customer Relationship Management
  4. Email Automation
  5. Office Automation & Workflow

All the opportunities that you recognize in twitter lists are available in your business contacts and more! People lists are the “untapped resource” your business is looking for.

Now what’s going to happen when twitter names are matched to calc{list}’s contacts? Hmm…

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This entry was posted on Wednesday, November 18th, 2009 at 9:38 pm and is filed under twitter. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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