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A Great Example Of Integrated Tweets

You know Twitter, that lovely microblogging service that Gapingvoid just left because he didn’t do much more than, well twittered? The same service that Robert Scoble heralds, and Jason Calacanis is aiming to dominate? Yes, that Twitter, the same Twitter that I’m on, and sharing space with the British government.

Since Twitter is addictive, lots of bloggers have decided to start importing Twitter content into their blogs. It’s nothing new, with several plugins available, the most popular one might be Alex King’s Twitter Tools, but I don’t know for sure. Either way, it’s a sure way to make your blog totally uninteresting, ugly, and boring. Think about it, who wants to read your tweets in a bullet list, hours after they happened? Chances are, most people don’t want to read them at all, especially when you’re offering a discussion with some friends, interesting only to those involved, but nevertheless cluttering your blog in a most hideous manner. Don’t take that last link to seriously by the way, Jeremy came to his senses

Still, your tweets are content, and maybe you want to attract the people who actually do care about what you have to say on Twitter to your account. Then integrate it smoothly, like Twisted Intellect, the most beautiful example of displaying tweets on a site to date:

Pretty Twitter integration

Pretty huh? I’m sure there are several others who’s doing this right as well, but I was actually quite blown away by this today. I’m a fan of serifs though, especially classy work with italics, so the site pretty much appeals to me.

The Rules of Twitter on Your Blog

Follow these rules when integrating Twitter on your blog or site, and you’ll be fine.

  • Don’t treat tweets as regular content! Put them someplace to the side, by themselves. Posts are content, tweets are, well, tweets.
  • Don’t give your tweets too much space! Think about it, does they really add that much to your blog to begin with? Shouldn’t you push your real content with that space instead?
  • Don’t show too many tweets! Really, how interesting are they after a while? Better to show just a handful, than to push out a RSS feed from your Twitter account containing 10 tweets, where 7 are from days past.
  • Don’t integrate Twitter unless you use it! What’s the point of displaying your tweets if they are not up to date? I’ll tell you right now, there is none.

Ready to follow that? OK, then please, please, please ask yourself yet again if your tweets actually add value to your blog. Maybe a link to your account is good enough? Chances are, for most of us, it is.

Have you seen other great integrations of Twitter content on sites and blogs? What’s your take on all this? Tell us in the comments, I know I’m dying to know.

  1. By Jeremy Kendall posted on April 15, 2008 at 11:13 am
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    Great post. I’ve been thinking about integrating Twitter on my own site and I’ve asked myself a lot of the same questions you’ve posed above. I love Twitter, but would my timeline really add value to my site? The jury is still out on that one.

  2. By Russel posted on August 24, 2008 at 10:14 am
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    Agreed. I’ve just put a blog up on my domain - not sure about the content yet, let alone the design but I intend having that finalised by Aug 31.

    So to Tweet or not to Tweet; and to be honest I don’t think so. Who wants to read a bunch of one-liners like: “Mmmm, bagels n beer o/t beach”; “Man, the waves are SO fine - I love living in Tel Aviv” all sent by moi via sms to my twitter account (also updates Facebook).

    It’s OK if the blog is a personal one; but not if I want to blog seriously about cycling in the city. Then again a tweet from the road while on my bicycle…

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