Changing travel, one tweet at a time
Microblogging travelers break news well ahead of mainstream media
Those words, hastily typed on Janis Krums’ iPhone just after US Airways flight 1549 crashed into the Hudson River on Thursday, marked yet another milestone in the microblogging revolution. Krums, a Sarasota, Fla., entrepreneur, posted his observations and a compelling photo of a half-submerged aircraft to Twitter, where it was seen by hundreds of people before any other media organization knew about the accident.
Twitter and related sites such as BrightKite have been breaking news since they’ve been around. They’ve offered first-hand accounts of events such as the terrorist attacks in Mumbai, the Virginia Tech shootings and California’s wildfires.
Before Krums scooped the New York media on the biggest news story of the year so far, there was Mike Wilson, aka “2drinksbehind,” who twittered his observations after his Continental Airlines flight slid off the runway and burst into flames in Denver last month.
“We were in the middle of a normal takeoff when we suddenly veered off,” he reported. Then he posted a picture of the crash. Then he tweeted that Continental kept the survivors “locked up” in its lounge until it could sort everything out. “Won't even serve us drinks,” he added.
So what? “The world will never be the same,” says Joel Comm, author of the book “Twitter Power: How to Dominate Your Market One Tweet at a Time.” The airline crashes marked a turning point for this emerging technology, according to Comm and other social media experts. Once the domain of a few early adopters, microblogging is now being embraced by the masses. It could change the way we travel.
“The viral nature of interesting posts expand your reach and influence,” says Comm.
He’s right. Seven out of 10 Twitter users joined just last year, according to the latest HubSpot “State of the Twittersphere” report. Somewhere between 5,000 and 10,000 Twitter accounts are opened every day. Most microbloggers have a small circle of friends — fewer than 30 — with whom they share their day-to-day thoughts. But as mocroblogging grows, so will the power and influence of these Twitterers, who blast dispatches not to exceed 140 characters to their network of “followers.”
Microblogging could enlighten and empower travelers, who used to be at the mercy of their airline, car-rental company or hotel. Imagine you’re Continental, and a plane-crash survivor has accused you of keeping him prisoner. What if your vast social network finds out about the bedbugs in your hotel room the moment you check in? Or your friends discover the silly surcharges on your rental vehicle before the car-rental firm’s customer service department has any inkling? Wouldn’t that change everything?
So how do you become a part of this microblogging movement? Here are eight tips from the experts.
1. Sign up
An account on Twitter or Brightkite is completely free. You can find out which of your friends are using the service by importing your contacts and then inviting them to join your network. (I’m on Twitter at elliottdotorg and you can follow msnbc.com’s travel section. The best way to learn how to microblog is to jump in and figure it out by watching others do it. “Build up a group of followers and communicate with them,” says Tom Johansmeyer, a blogger for Gadling.com. “Then, when you’re on the road, there will be people reading, commenting and participating.”
2. Find influential travelers
Blogger Beth Ziesenis says it isn’t necessarily the size of the network that matters, as much as who is a part of it. Nothing can improve your next trip like having the right friends. She recently caught wind of a flight delay long before her airline told her, thanks to a circle of well-traveled online contacts. These influencers “twitter happily from empty airports as they sail through security lines, or they’ll share their real-time experiences with traveling hassles,” she told me. “You’ll gain a world of insight on safe and hassle-free travel by listening to those who do it the most.” Where are these powerful microbloggers? I recently profiled them on my blog or you can find a list of the top Twitter users by category at the Shorty Awards site.
3. Take it with you![]()
Part of what makes microblogging so compelling is that it’s everywhere — just accessible from your computer at home or work. If you only twitter while you’re at home, you’ll miss half the fun. “Make sure to use the service from your mobile device so you can get tips while on the go,” says Issac Kelly, who created an application called My Twitter Notebook that allows you to take notes through Twitter. I have two free applications — Twitterific and Twittelator — installed on my iPhone.
4. Be fascinating
No one is interested in navel-gazing — at least not when you’re building a community of travelers. Interesting brings new followers to your network. For example, travel blogger Pam Mandel added to her list of followers when she microblogged a scary emergency landing last year. She also blogged about it on her site. “I believe I have the dubious honor of being the first to tweet a plane ‘crash,’” she told me. “I hope it’s not my 15 minutes.”
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