Adding some identity and my SocialMedian shirt.

For some reason, when I started getting into blogging and social media in a semi-formal way, I decided to use the following picture as my avatar everywhere:

BadgerGravling aka Dan Thornton

BadgerGravling aka Dan Thornton

As a result, at recent events I’ve chatted to several people who knew and chatted with my online identity, but didn’t realise it was me for quite a while.

Which is funny, but also highlights the weakness of not having more pictures of me in circulation, as I might be missing out on some really good conversations.

So, seeing as I received a very cool free T-shirt from Socialmedian, a service which I’m using more and more, I thought I’d take a picture to help me people identify me a little more easily.

Does this help?

Does this help?

So that should make it a bit easier to spot me at events, conferences and twestivals etc…

In all seriousness, it does highlight a slight problem with using imagery etc as an avatar, rather than a real picture – particularly as I’m between motorcycles and on public transport to a lot of events, and motorcycle crash helmets have a lifespan of about five years – and the same model/paintsheme probably won’t exist!

Let people know who you are and why you're following

At some point recently, I appeared to have achieved critical mass on Twitter – that is, I get a trickle of people requesting to follow me, even when it isn’t reciprocal, or when I haven’t been particularly active. Sometimes the trickle turns into a miniflood, but I always check out every single follower to decide whether to return the favour – and my ratio of Following to Followers is pretty close to 1:1 (Here’s the proof).

But the decision is getting much harder, because a seemingly increasing number of people are following without giving me a clue of who they are, or why I should return the favour. And following almost 1500 people means I’m becoming more careful about the signal to noise ratio of people I’m following.

  • Following me, but having updates protected: Unless I know who you are, or you’ve sent me a message, and your updates are protected, how can I guess whether to guess to request to return the favour?
  • No weblink or informative Bio: A lot of people, myself included, have bio information which doesn’t outline exactly what we do for a job, or where our exact interests lay. For instance, mine is: ‘Social Media, Community Marketing,Blogger,Dad,Writer’, but I’ve seen a lot more vague descriptions. If that’s combined with an absence of a link to a blog, linkedin profile or some clue about who you are, I’m scratching my head again.
  • Weblink doesn’t give me a clue: This seems to happen with certain content platforms – particularly options like Tumblr, where it’s easy to set up a default Tumblelog without leaving any information. That means I need to spend time going through every post for the last few days to find out more, and makes it tempting to move onto someone/something else in this time-starved world.

This doesn’t mean I only follow people with exactly the same jobs and interests – far from it. But I do only follow people who I think will bring something interesting, entertaining or valuable to the party.

And it’s not just me: Even as I started to write this, I noticed Darren Rowse is running a poll on Twitip, asking ‘Do you automatically follow everyone that follows you?’ Currently 89% of those taking the poll have said they don’t, for similar reasons to myself.

Top tips:

So what’s the best way to let people know who you are?

  • Insert a relevant personal/company weblink. It can be your blog, your Linkedin profile, your bio on the corporate website etc – just anything that can give some clue about what you do.
  • If you have a personal/lifestyle type blog you want to link to, then consider either linking to the About page, or to a special landing page or post created to people arriving from Twitter.
  • Consider using your Twitter background to serve up some information. You can pay professionals, or just experiment with your own image, containing some info on yourself.
  • And if you’re using Protected Updates, and you want to converse, interact and have a follow reciprocated, then why not contact them via an alternative channel, e.g. an email address on their blog, to let them know who you are and why you’re following them.

It’s an example of what you put into something have a direct relationship with what you get out of it. If you’re informative about who you are, you’re much more likely to get more people finding you, interacting with you, and for those interactions to be far more relevant.

I’ve come out of the internet alias closet….

After 300 posts on this blog, several other projects, and signing up for who knows how many social networks, I’ve made the decision to come out from the alias closet.

I originally had different ideas for what I would be blogging about, so a totally anonymous identity made sense. Then, as I settled on a slightly different focus, I wanted friends to be able to identify me, but was still more comfortable using an alias (years of chat rooms/social networks/Xbox Live).

But now my blog is not only an important part of my identity, it’s also a key element of my public persona, my network, and my career.

So despite the fact I’ll continue to exist under the pseudonym of Badger Gravling on Twitter, Del.icio.us, Stumbleupon, Digg, FriendFeed, etc, etc, within my blogging home, I’m Dan.

Hello.