I’ll be the first to admit I’m not a social media buff.
Sure, I enjoy browsing tweets and scrolling mindlessly through Instagram, but I’m more of an observer than a participant. However, when I stumbled across Writing Twitter, I knew it was something I wanted at least try to be a part of.
Hundreds of thousands of users all creating content about a common interest: writing. From published authors to newbies, tweets are dedicated to sharing their experiences with writing, daily frustrations, moments of inspiration, word counts. It’s all there.
I’ve only been on the writer’s side of Twitter for about two and a half weeks now, (I’ve had a personal Twitter for years, so I was already familiar with the layout), but I feel it’s been enough time to get a bit of a handle on the site.
With that being said, this is my experience with #writingcommunity so far:
Pro: Interaction
This is obviously a huge advantage. It’s much more encouraging to write when you know there are others who support you–and writing twitter is all about support. Constant tags to promote twitter friends, retweets about published books; you’re definitely not alone here. You’re with people who want you to succeed.
Con: Overwhelming
A lot of writers on twitter follow hundreds, if not thousands accounts, and usually returning the favor is the norm. This means your timeline is constantly over-brimming with content. Your notifications are constantly blowing up (especially if you interact with others). It’s overwhelming how much goes on, and easy to feel lost.
Pro: Finding new books
Everyone loves to promote their books on Twitter. Everyone loves to promote their friend’s book on Twitter. Want to find a book recommendation? The writing community will help you with that. There’s no shortage of new material and you can come across books you never would have even looked twice at.
Con: Content Graveyard
With that much content, you can be sunk to to the bottom of someone’s feed very easily. If you don’t have followers retweeting your work, you may feel like no one is seeing it. (And this is very much a possibility.)
Pro: Inspiration
Writing slump? Not here. With constant writing samples and prompts, there’s no shortage of inspiration flowing your way. Writers often offer peeks of their work and words of encouragement to work past your block.
Con: DISTRACTION
Just like any other form of social media, Writing Twitter is a distraction. Instead of spending time on your manuscript, you may feel compelled to scroll mindlessly through your feed to find content to retweet and reply to. After all, are you really a writer until you think of a hundred ways to not write?
These are just some of my observations about #writingcommunity. If you thrive on interacting with other people, twitter may be for you. If not? Don’t sweat it. Your ability to carefully craft 280 characters has nothing to do with how successful of an author you can be.
What are thoughts about Writing Twitter? Let me know below.