
Last week, I started looking at tools for managing Twitter followers and keeping your Twitter account spam free. Here are the last four tools I tested.
Twerpscan quickly scanned my follower list and presented them in a neat table, with stars next to those I was following. To unfollow, you just click on a star or click on a star outline to follow a Twitter user. Before making your decision click on a user to see more information, including the latest tweet. You can sort the Twerpscan table by any of the headings, such as follower count, following count, number of tweets and date of last tweet. You can also do bulk operations (block, follow, unfollow) by selecting checkboxes. One strange thing is that the follower list didn’t update automatically when I had done this, so I was never sure that the process had worked, but it had, as I found out when I accessed Twitter via the web.
Once you’re signed in to Twitblock, just click a button to scan your follower database for spam accounts. The application rates your followers for spamminess (out of 1000) and highlights the spammiest ones in red so you can block them. Two links give you the option to mark users as ‘not spam’ or to look further at stats for the account. From this interface you can choose to block and report. The application also keeps track of those you have already blocked. This tool is easy to use and integrates well with Twitter.
Nest Unclutterer is a bit different. It allows you to highlight accounts following more than a certain amount of people (I’ve got it set at 1,500, but you can change this figure. You can also search for people who haven’t tweeted recently. There’s also a box to whitelist certain users so that you don’t accidentally block someone you really want to be in contact with. Click ‘clean my nest’ and you get a list of Twitter users who meet the criteria. Click the ones you want to whitelist, then click the button to unfollow and block the rest. Don’t worry, you do get another chance to whitelist those users before the blocking becomes permanent.
The TwitCleaner takes quite a while to scan your follower list and sends you a DM when your profile is ready. It then segments your list in a no-nonsense way, like this:
To save anyone from deletion, click on the icons, or click a link to save an entire category. They will be greyed out, then you can quickly unfollow the rest. This looks like a really useful tool, but it needs cookies to save your info and although both browsers I tested it with accepted cookies, I couldn’t get past the ‘enable cookies’ message.
If you simply want to get rid of dormant followers, then MyCleenr is the quickest tool, followed by Nest Unclutterer for those with more than 700 followers. If you need to get rid of spammy accounts, then the Twit Cleaner looked most promising, but TwitBlock worked best. What tools have you used to keep your Twitter accounts clean?
Author comments are in a darker gray color for you to easily identify the posts author in the comments
Comments are closed since this post is older than 30 days. However, you can continue this discussion in our popular Blogging Forums
One of my followers recently told me about @ReFollow – I just finished it and cleaned out about 1500 of my original 14,300 followers.
I did try MyCleenr but quickly found out that is appears the only way I could unfollow those people was to pay MyCleenr money, which I opted not to do.
Another service that seems kind of cool and is free is http://www.fakefollowers.com
Thanks; funnily enough I tried ReFollow yesterday and was quite impressed. I’m off to check out Fake Followers now.
Sharon,
it is interesting for me have found tweeter Follower manager summary in your site. I have tweeter account, but just start in October 2009 (very late).
What I want to know, do those kind of tools will clean spam only?
I just wonder it will delete the real follower.
Thks
Sorry, I mean I just worry…not wonder
It often depends on who you select; usually the tools suggest who might be a spammer and you get the chance to say yes or no before deleting.