There are a lot of different third-party applications that claim to make your Twitter experience even better. One has certainly come in more handy than others for me, and that is Refollow. I have found with the more followers I get on Twitter, it becomes a lot more tedious to keep up. Once I discovered this site, it was that much easier. Here I will walk you through, step-by-step, how I manage my followers using Refollow:
1. Log on to Refollow:

This can be done either using Twitter OAuth or by inputting your Twitter username and password. The reason you need to login is that Refollow needs to access your followers, your friends and the followers of people you follow.
2. Load your followers and friends: When you first login, the first thing to happen is an automatic load of 100 of your friends (people you are following) and 100 of your followers. This will take a few seconds. If you want to load more, you can click the “more” or “all” options in the “Show me” box. Each load of 100 costs 1 API call. You only get 150 Twitter API an hour, so if you have a lot of followers, I would suggest closing any other programs that will use the API (such as TweetDeck or HootSuite). If you move your mouse over one of the pictures in the grid, a popup will show you some info about that user. At the top left of that popup is a little icon that let’s you know your relationship (a pink bar means you’re following them, a yellow bar means they are following you, and both bars mean you are following each other. A red “X” through the pink bar means you previously followed them, but not anymore).
3. Get familiar with the filters: While your followers and friends are loading, look at the top of your screen. You will see this:
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These filters are how you manage your followers. As you can see, there are several filters for you use: Following me, Not Following Me, I’m Following, I’m not Following, Previously Followed, Never Followed, Locked, Not Locked, With Picture, Without Picture, Tweeting in the last X days, No Tweets in the last X days. There are SOOO many different combinations that you can use. For instance, if I wanted to see who I was following that wasn’t following me who hasn’t tweeted in 3 days, I can do that! Or I can see, 100 tweeps at a time, users who are following me that I’m not following back. With the press of a button, I can follow all of them, instead of going through page by page on the web. There are also Search boxes that can be used in conjunction with the filters. If I wanted to search for followers from Long Island, NY who are following me, who have been active in the past 2 days, this too is possible.
4. Lock Important Users: Before I do anything, I use the “Lock” feature to lock celebrities and other tweeps that don’t follow me so that they are not accidentally unfollowed. I do this by loading all of those I am following and then sorting the users by follow count (celebrities normally have very high follow counts). Now, I see, in pages of 100, all of the tweeps I follow that aren’t following me back. Using the “Select Page” button, I select all 100 people on the page and then click the “Lock” button. After a user is locked, a little icon will show on the bottom right of their avatar on Refollow. These users will never be refollowed, until you unlock them. Once all important users are locked, I move onto the next step.
5. Unfollow Users that are not following you: I try not to do this often, because normally, there is a reason that I follow a person in the first place. However, due to Twitter’s follow limits, sometimes I need to clean out those I’m following to make room for new followers. Once my “following” list is loaded, I use these filters: I’m following, Not following me. Most of those that come up will be locked from the previous step. Those that are not locked can be unfollowed, in lots of 100, with the press of the “Unfollow” button. If I want to only unfollow users who have been inactive for a certain number of days, I use that filter as well.
6. Follow Users that are following you: Once I have cleaned out people not following me, I should now have room to follow all of those users that are following me that I may not be following. I make sure all (or as many as possible) of my followers are loaded. I then check off “Following Me” and “I’m not Following”. This will load anyone who I’m not following. To select the entire page, I click “Select Page” and click “Follow”.
7. Find New People:

Another great thing about Refollow is the ability to view and follow, people that are followed by friends. Normally, if someone I admire is following someone, then most likely, I will enjoy their tweets as well. Using the “Users Who are Followed By” box, I type in a user name. Refollow then loads that person’s friends, 100 per page. The process is the same as with your own followers. I use the filters again to see who they follow that I’m not following.
These steps should get you started using Refollow. Hopefully, the site makes your Twitter experience that much better, as it has for me. Since discovering the site, I spend less time refollowing people and actually interacting with them, and that’s really what Twitter is all about.



















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