Learn how Lists make job searching with Twitter so much easier.

If you’re new to Twitter Lists, first read my handy guide How To Best Use Twitter Lists and then come back here.

Twitter mousepadIn this article you’ll find:

Download The Ultimate Twitter Job Search Guide

Job Search Benefits of Twitter Lists

You’ll be better organized

Use Lists to categorize the Twitter users that you follow specifically for job search purposes and keep them separate from the other users you follow.

Simplify your Twitter usage

By organizing your tweets into relevant Lists, you can better focus on getting things done such as following up on job listings and networking with people who might be able to help you get a job.

Find relevant Twitter users to follow

By seeing other people’s Lists, you can discover who other similar job seekers found helpful for their Twitter job searches.

Lists save you time

If someone else has already spent the effort to make a List relevant to your job search, why bother doing it again yourself?

Lists let you target companies without them knowing

If you create a Shadow List of companies you’re targeting, you can learn a lot about them without those companies having any idea that you’re there.

Lists can help build your personal brand

Spending the effort to make Lists is a good idea if the Lists you make are valuable to other people AND relevant to your personal brand, so that people remember you later when they need help from someone like you.

And that’s just one personal branding tip with Lists. This next section has so much more…

10 Ways Twitter Lists Can Build Your Personal Brand

By attracting influencers to List you

If experts in your industry List you as an expert too, that testimonial will do wonders for your personal brand.

By attracting many people to List you

If many people List you, as can be seen by the listed count on your Twitter profile, it’s probably because you are someone valuable to follow.

By attracting many people to List you the same way

If many people List you similarly and in a way related to your brand – which you can check using Listiti – other people will get the right impression of you just as they discover you on Lists.

By growing your Lists

If you attract enough followers to your Lists, you will become known as a quality List builder, which will bring more followers to your Lists, and so on. When people appreciate the value you give them with your Lists, they’re more likely to follow then and/or you directly.

By the kinds of Lists you build

Creating Lists related to a certain industry or profession is a clear way of associating yourself with them. As you’d expect, I have already built a number of Lists related to job search.

By how you describe the Lists you build

When you create a new List, clearly explain its purpose in the description. Also, if someone inspired you to create that List, thank them. Giving credit always leaves a good impression.

By who you List

Adding someone to your List increases the chance that they will visit your profile out of curiousity to see who is Listing them.

By who listens to your suggestions

Help other people improve their Lists- if you think that someone’s List could be better with an addition or two, tell them.

By who you thank for Listing you

People always appreciate sincere thanks, and it’s a simple, positive way to stand out.

By having an optimized Twitter profile

If you follow these personal branding tips, you will attract ever more people to your Twitter profile but unless they like what they find, they won’t follow you or your Lists.

10 Twitter Lists Best Practices for Job Seekers

Now that you understand all the benefits of Twitter List usage for your job search, let’s get to how you can do so effectively right from the start.

If you haven’t already, go back and see the general purpose Twitter Lists best practices I’ve already given you. Here I’ll focus on the best practices that are specifically important for job searching on Twitter:

Confidential job search? Keep all your job search-related Lists private

If you’re currently employed and are doing a confidential job search, keep your Lists out of sight. The main disadvantage here is that there are people who you will want to be aware that you’re following but who won’t know you’re there because you’re following them privately. However, the risk of having your confidential job search discovered by your current employer is too high otherwise.

Don’t overload yourself with Lists

Before Lists, Twitter was a confusing flow of information. Lists may let you filter what you need, but having too many Lists will just waste your time in a different way and you’ll find that in the end, you only use a few of your Lists. If you plan well from the start and use the List strategy I recommend below, you’ll avoid wasting all that time from the start.

Create and use a job search VIP List

This is a List of the job search-related Twitter users whose tweets you don’t want to miss, such as people you’re networking with or people you’re learning from about job search in general or about improving your skills in particular. Use this List as your default Twitter stream when you’re looking for a job.

Create a List of job feeds

Use my directory of 400+ Twitter job feeds to build a List of job feeds to follow. If you find feeds that are very relevant, you might want to add them to your VIP List but most feeds that are worth watching will still have tweets that aren’t relevant. Instead of having them pollute your VIP List, keep them on a separate List to browse daily.

Attract people to your network by Listing them

If people are watching the listed count on their Twitter profile (which shows how many Lists follow them) or using a service like Listiti to send alerts when they’ve been added to a List, they will know when you’ve added them to your List and they just might click through to discover who you are, especially if they like the name of the List you’ve put them on.

For example, if you added me to your List of “Best Job Search Experts Anywhere”, I’d certainly be tempted to see who tagged me that way. Although you can save time by following other people’s Lists, this is one reason to create your own Lists instead (although you can do both).

Browse the Lists created by the experts on your job search VIP List

This way you can discover relevant Lists to follow and even other people to add to your VIP List.

Create Value Lists

If you’re trying to build your personal brand and make a name for yourself in your industry, create at least one Value List to attract attention from people whose attention you’d like to attract i.e. people in your profession who might be able to lead you to your next job. For example, you could create and maintain a List of job feeds that are related to your profession or the place you live or you could make a List of influencers in your profession.

Have a List for learning

Whether to follow relevant news or experts sharing links, either follow or create a dedicated List for daily learning and improving your skills. It might be tempting to integrate this into your VIP List but only do that if you can avoid getting distracted during the hours where you should be job searching. Another reason to make this a separate List is because it would likely be a Value List for other people.

Target companies by Listing them

Confidential job search aside, whether you decide to make this a public or private List depends on a number of things. Building a relationship with a company doesn’t mean you need to put them on a public List because you can always follow them directly, which will draw less attention than Listing them. If you’re concerned about competing job seekers knowing who you’re targeting – which they could know using Listiti – just make a Shadow List. Or, for example if you’re participating in a competition sponsored by a company, you might specifically want them to know you’re following in which case you should not only List them publicly, which raises the odds that they will notice you.

Research companies by following their employee Lists

Following Twitter’s lead (pun intended), companies are creating lists of their employees, which will be a great way to build relationships with them and ask them questions about (hidden) job openings. Cross-reference with LinkedIn or Facebook to get a better idea of a List member’s background.

17 Kinds of Job Search Twitter Users to List (with example Lists!)

Use these suggestions for ideas of who to List, or just follow the recommended List if it’s a good match for you:

  1. Relevant job feeds like those in Cris Janzen’s Job Postings List.
  2. Recruiters who might be able to place you, like Mark Stelzner’s great-hr-recruiting-peeps List.
  3. Job search experts like Jennifer McClure’s career-coaches-job-search List.
  4. Career success experts like Lindsey Pollak’s career-workplace List.
  5. Personal branding experts to inspire you like Mohammed Al-Taee’s Personal Branding List.
  6. Organizations that offer internships or apprenticeships like my Cool Internships List.
  7. Student organizations like globalquad’s Student Organizations List.
  8. Alumni associations such as EtiquetteWise’s Alumni Associations List.
  9. University or College Career Centers like Lindsey Pollak’s college career centers List.
  10. Companies who are hiring like Susan P. Joyce’s Employers Recruiting List.
  11. Companies you’re targeting like thesoursop’s Brands_Companies_Bricks List.
  12. People at companies you’re targeting, like this List of Google Employees.
  13. Most important bloggers in your industry like my Top Job Bloggers List.
  14. Experts to learn from in your industry, like you might find by searching for your industry on Listorious.
  15. Professional associations, clubs, guilds, leagues, etc. like RecruitingBlogs’ Community List.
  16. Industry news sources
  17. Networking groups

Follow the most pertinent of these Twitter users with your job search VIP List.

A Can’t Miss Twitter List Strategy for Job Seekers

To get the most out of Twitter Lists while doing the least amount of work, you will need:

  • 1 job search VIP List – check this first when you log onto Twitter for job search purposes. If you also use Twitter for fun, you might have a separate, general-purpose VIP List too.
  • 1 List of job feeds – if you find another person’s List that covers your industry, copy the parts you need in creating your own List that you can update later. Check this List twice a day.
  • 1 Value List (at least) that you create as part of your personal branding. Update this as necessary.
  • 1 List for learning – there’s a good chance this will be a Value List created by someone else but if you can’t find the right List for you, just create your own and follow more relevant people as you discover them.
  • 1 Shadow List of companies and people you’re targeting or considering targeting. Check this List once a day.

For best results, set aside time every day to interact with people on your Lists. In other words, don’t just follow Lists- build relationships with the people on the Lists.

Which Twitter Lists Tools You Should Use and How

These tools will also help you get the most out of Twitter Lists:

Official Twitter List Widget – a widget for blogs and other websites that displays tweets from a specific Lists. This is a good way to show off any Value Lists you’ve created in building your personal brand.

MustExist’s List Tags – a great tool for personal branding, List Tags lets you compare how people List you. If you’re wondering how successful your personal brand is, try this tool and check if the results match the way you’re branding yourself.

Listiti – “Get notified whenever your brand / product / company / … appears in Twitter Lists of your choice.” Use this to find out who’s Listing you.

Listorious – a directory of Twitter Lists with rankings so you can discover and find popular Lists to follow.

Twitter Lists 2 RSS – if you like to follow blogs by RSS, you can now follow Twitter Lists as well with this tool. Since Twitter can’t tell you’re following those Lists, this is like following Lists privately, something you can’t otherwise do on Twitter.

TweepML – lets you follow all members of a Twitter List in one shot.

Seesmic Desktop – the first Twitter desktop client that’s compatible with Twitter Lists, the software pulls in your Twitter Lists among its Userlists. I already recommended this tool in [beginnner’s guide]

Tweetvisor – a web client for Twitter that is also Lists-compatible, you might prefer it over the basic Twitter.com.

Free Bonus

Learn how to find use Twitter to find jobs quickly in the short-term and to attract jobs in the long-term.

This free download contains sections on:
  • How To Make Every Recruiter Jump To Hire You
  • Which Key Tools Need to Be in Your Twitter Job Search Toolbox?
  • An Easy Checklist to Follow Every Day
Click the image below to get access to The Ultimate Twitter Job Search Guide: The Ultimate Twitter Job Search Guide

JobMob Insiders can get this free bonus and other exclusive content in the JobMob Insider Bonuses area. Join now, it's free!

Subscribe to JobMob via RSS or email and follow me on Twitter for the best Twitter job search tips.

Jacob Share

Job Search Expert, Professional Blogger, Creative Thinker, Community Builder with a sense of humor. I like to help people.

This Post Has 32 Comments

  1. Pingback: Tweets that mention How To Best Use Twitter Lists for Job Search | JobMob -- Topsy.com

  2. Pingback: uberVU - social comments

  3. Pingback: Tweets that mention How To Best Use Twitter Lists for Job Search | JobMob -- Topsy.com

  4. Morren

    Very nice post,You explained very well how we can use twitter for job search and job lists.

  5. Pingback: Twitter Replaces Job Boards? | Career Sherpa | HerRochester

  6. Pingback: cirkovic ivan

  7. Kate

    I’m using lists to make sure I don’t miss life-changing posts from friends.

Leave a Reply