Twiangulate Lets You Follow Your Followers' Followers
Though I could just as easily have gotten an email from Henry about it, the fact that the ads were properly targeted already tells you something about the thinking about creating and promoting the site. Recently a few influential folks whose opinions I respect, like Sree Sreenivasan also profiled the site and talked about their own experience of finding it highly useful. So that initial ad coupled with the validation that comes from seeing someone in my network using it was enough to get me to try the site ... and now I'm hooked. I've tried lots of similar Twitter-Finding-Following-Ranking type applications. They always seem to spit out a number or list at the end with relatively little context and everything is ranked by volume. More Twitter followers equals a higher influence in general.
- Uses the most common sense metric for influence. In life, as the saying goes, it's not who you know but who knows you. Twiangulate uses this principle to help you find out how influential someone's follower base is. If they command a large number of followers who have high influence, chances are they will to. This is a page from Google's book about how they rank web pages as well, but for some reason has been notably missing from many Twitter apps designed to help judge influence.
- Designed to spotlight intersections. It's not hard to find a list of the top marketers on Twitter, or the top fashion bloggers, but it can be tough to narrow down the list of bloggers who also talk often about fashion. You can do it with Twiangulate if can find one Twitter username for each category and then just highlight the people they commonly follow. Finally you have a way to find new people on Twitter that doesn't rely either on their username or them putting an accurate description into their bio.
- Lets you focus on the small too. As Sree noted in his piece, there is much insight you can gain by looking at the opposite end of the spectrum for Twitter followers ... who are the followers with the lowest influence that those with the highest follow. This method would likely help you uncover people like Kim Kardashian's aunt, who have relatively small accounts but may be important to the influencers you might be interested in reaching as a marketer.






This is a great post. Well thought out and very informative for the Realtor using Twitter. I especially like your suggestion.
Posted by: IFA Marketing services | Tuesday, February 09, 2010 at 07:42 AM
Agreed - great app. Tons of potential business applications, particularly competitive intelligence.
Posted by: Eric Boggs | Tuesday, February 09, 2010 at 05:55 PM
following a followers follower? that's new.... but i fail to see how that would work better than traditional twitter and stuff.
Posted by: grosir | Wednesday, February 10, 2010 at 11:34 PM
Thanks for pointing this site out. While I'm not a fan of their name as you are, I am a fan of their offering. I think this is certainly an under served market. I like how they took a play right from Google's playbook and are using it to their advantage now.
Posted by: Twitter Curious | Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 05:00 PM
Hi, thank you very much. good job.
Posted by: Ian Eisenberg | Friday, February 19, 2010 at 06:49 AM