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2 Awesome Twitter Search Tools That Give You What Twitter Lacks

I love Twitter. That was almost love at the first sight. It’s a great idea which became awesome thanks to all the apps that completed it.

Here are two absolutely fantastic tools that have some really basic functionality Twitter still lacks:

Snapbird: Better search


Snapbird is a freemium tool giving you some cool searching options you probably didn’t know you actually needed a lot! In fact, its functionality is so cool that I am surprised Twitter doesn’t offer anything like that:

Search your or anyone’s favorites likes

There are lots of ways to use Twitter likes. Most use them to “thank” for the mention. Some people use them to bookmark ideas for later reference. Others favorite Twitter testimonials to easier curate them

In any of those cases, the ability to search your own or someone else’s likes for a keyword or a hashtag is priceless…

You can investigate what others favorite, look back into your own Twitter bookmarks or even find who you “thanked” in the past!

Search for DMs you sent or received

Why Twitter doesn’t allow to search within your Twitter inbox is beyond me. Sometimes I have to scroll and scroll until I find the conversation I need. Am I probably missing something here?

I can get it that some people don’t use Twitter DMs that much but many of us still do! I am keeping my Twitter private inbox very clean and to the point; yet there’s no built-in solution to search it.

Snapbird solves that problem allowing you to search for DMs you sent or received.

Twiangulate: How we are connected?


I mentioned Twiangulate a few times in the past but they have changed the functionality a bit, so time to take a look at it again. Right now it’s a great connection discovery tool that gives you way to find how you are connected to someone else on Twitter (Build relationships!)

I love their “Keywords” tab allowing for some great Twitter bio search functionality. You can search by any keyword in a bio and you can even limit your search to someone’s friends. For example:

  • Find experts and insiders. Discover which accounts are followed by key people in a gossip empire, etc.
  • Understand clout. Determine which influencers and celebrities follow an account using the “reach” search.
  • Reveal a group’s favorites. Which accounts are most followed by members of a group, for example, the US Congress, Ontario’s MPPs or NYTimes journalists?

There are plenty of ways to play with the search tool for blogger and influencer outreach, relationship building, and more!

Find who these two Twitter accounts have in common

Give two Twitter accounts and find who the both follow (as well as who follows both of them:):

Find most powerful accounts that follow both Twitter users (and how they overlap):

twiangulate

Which Twitter search tools are you using and why? Please let us know in the comments!

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10 Responses

  1. Awesome is the word! great work, here, Anne. I had no idea that we could use these Twitter apps. They are great for finding those elusive ‘like-minded thinkers’.

  2. I was just thinking today about how I don’t like the direct messages, but how there may be something in there that I should probably look at it. I don’t know why Twitter wouldn’t make that more functional either. So, I will definitely be checking out Snapbird.

  3. Hey Ann, I must say I never heard of triangulate. After seeing what it’s all about, I’m finding it really helpful! Thank you!

  4. I’ve been using Triangulate for quite some time. It’s a great way to find how you’re connected to others and weed out the unwanted ones.

    Thanks for adding up these two awesome Twitter search tools.

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Jim Boykin
Jim Boykin

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Ann Smarty
Ann Smarty

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