I usually won't avoid the Tweet. The tweet is a good proving ground for the blog post anyway usually. If nobody cared, eh, maybe not that good of a post. If it does get good engagement, it's like the conversation around it is useful in the creation of the blog post anyway. Plus, tweets are so easy to kick out the door. Blog posts, for me, on purpose, have a longer schedule that includes editing and scheduling and such.
Here's an example tweet. Just a silly little UI experiment. I didn't feel like waiting to blog about it to drop the demo. But from the Twitter thread, I got some interesting technical feedback, info about what parts people were most suprised by, and some other related ideas. That will, hopefully, lead to a much more robust blog post.
I mean even treat DEV like that honestly. I wrote this blog post reaction quickly here, but then refinied it for my own blog with some of the feedback.
I feel the exact same way a lot of the time!!! How do you determine what you want to turn into a blog post and what you leave as a simple Tweet?
Thanks for much for taking the time to answer questions and inspire the rest of us π€
I usually won't avoid the Tweet. The tweet is a good proving ground for the blog post anyway usually. If nobody cared, eh, maybe not that good of a post. If it does get good engagement, it's like the conversation around it is useful in the creation of the blog post anyway. Plus, tweets are so easy to kick out the door. Blog posts, for me, on purpose, have a longer schedule that includes editing and scheduling and such.
Here's an example tweet. Just a silly little UI experiment. I didn't feel like waiting to blog about it to drop the demo. But from the Twitter thread, I got some interesting technical feedback, info about what parts people were most suprised by, and some other related ideas. That will, hopefully, lead to a much more robust blog post.
I mean even treat DEV like that honestly. I wrote this blog post reaction quickly here, but then refinied it for my own blog with some of the feedback.
I like it, sounds like a solid strategy π Thanks for taking the time to share!