2
1 Comment

My first week on Twitter: 1261 impressions and other stats

Last week was the first week when I decided to actively post and engage on Twitter.

My tactic was basic: post one tweet per day and interact with other tweets that are interesting to me.

Below you’ll find some stats from the previous week.

Tweets and replies

Total: 50
Tweets on my profile: 6
Replies to other tweets: 44

Impressions

Total: 1261
Tweets: 576
Replies: 685

Engagement

Total: 98
Comments: 25
Likes: 53
Profile link clicks: 17
Link clicks in tweets: 3

The most popular tweet

The most popular tweet reached 277 impressions, which is almost 22% of all the impressions.

Mainly, it happened because @philkellr interacted with the tweet. And he has a much higher follower count compared to my account.

New followers

I’ve got 13 new followers last week. This was +100% growth, now I have 26 followers 🙂

Other notes

Also, I’ve had 6 real conversations on messenger. This one is quite valuable for me, I’ve had a chance to chat with other entrepreneurs and developers.

My side project had 0 new sign-ups. But I’m ok with that, as I wasn’t expecting to get new sign-ups straight away. I don’t believe it’s possible to build trust in one week.

Please share your thought in the comments below. Do you find this post useful? What other stats you want to see?

@23sergej is my Twitter account if you would like to check it or get in touch with me 😉

posted to Icon for group Building in Public
Building in Public
on May 8, 2023
  1. 1

    This was a great case study example Sergej, thanks for sharing!

Trending on Indie Hackers
Priorities for launching a SaaS solo, with no budget User Avatar 211 comments I built a tool directory that doesn't pretend every founder has the same needs User Avatar 44 comments AI helped me ship faster. Then I forgot what my product actually does. User Avatar 9 comments I built a browser-based photo geotagging tool. What should I lead with? User Avatar 6 comments Why founder-led outbound breaks the moment you try to delegate it User Avatar 5 comments A one-week feature took two months, mostly spent keeping three systems in sync User Avatar 2 comments