Isn’t this posture look familiar, yes it does to most people it could be
you.
Well, but
here are some warning signs of becoming a social snob.
- You can quote your traffic stats, but not your bank balance
- You’ve spent more than 5 minutes trying to think of something witty to say on twitter
- You know your klout score by heart
- You talk about cool things, but you never seem to do cool things
- You worry about how the use of emoticons reflects on your personal brand
- You refuse to promote affiliate links, even for products you love
- You know how percent feedback is calculated on Facebook
- You are annoyed that LinkedIn doesn’t display your true number of connections
- You un-follow your friends because they don’t tweet your posts
- You share quotes just to get a little attention
- You’re so inundated with email you’ve started to ignore people you don’t know
- You write posts about social media snobs (oops)
- You are so angry with one of the social networks that you are rooting for it to fail
- You have nothing for sale, and you look down upon those who do
- You only comment on the Facebook walls of celebrities in your niche
- You refuse interviews because they don’t have enough followers/fans/subscribers
- You spend more money on redesigning your profiles than you do on advertising
- You no longer read your blog comments
- You believe information wants to be free
- You ignore the endless, silly questions from beginners
- You can’t remember the last time you thanked your fans
You can
stop it from becoming a problem, though. Because you see, social media snobbery
is only dangerous when it’s not accompanied by an equal degree of empathy.
What
makes you snobbery from the list above?
Source:
http://www.copyblogger.com/social-media-snob/

I mute say that I agree with number two and I think its because I want people to re-tweet me as affirmation that the point I just made is valid.
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