When lawyers who are new to Twitter ask me how to find other lawyers to follow, I point them to either of two directories, LexTweet, operated by the folks at legal blog company LexBlog, and LegalBirds, part of the Justia legal portal. Both of these enable you to find lawyers on Twitter by popularity and location. In addition, LegalBirds organizes them by practice areas, so if you want to find an estate-planning lawyer on Twitter, you can.

However, I was surprised to notice that neither of these sites is up-to-date on Twitter “stats” — most notably, number of followers. The number of followers someone has on Twitter does not matter much in the real world, but it can be an indication of whether the person is worth following. Plus, both sites list lawyers by number of followers.

Consider Harvard Law Professor Lawrence Lessig, who LegalBirds lists as the lawyer with the most followers and LexTweet lists as #5. As of this writing, Lessig has 266,959 followers, but LegalBirds has the number at 229,155 and LexTweet has half the actual number, 127,612.

For others, the numbers are much farther off. David Lat, the editor of the popular blog Above the Law, has 10,763 followers as of this writing. But LegalBirds lists him as having 3,088 and LexTweet has him at 4,502. Even LexTweet’s owner, Kevin O’Keefe, doesn’t get a break. While he actually has almost 17,000 followers, his site lists him with 10,831 and LegalBirds has him at 14,745.

Like I say, this doesn’t really matter in the real world, unless you’re a Twitter version of one of those baseball nerds who is obsessed with stats. Both of these directories are still useful for finding lawyers on Twitter.

A Site for ‘Social Intelligence’

Meanwhile, a different type of directory for finding lawyers on Twitter — as well as for gaining insight into your own network of followers — is Twtrland. Unlike the directories above, Twtrland is not exclusively a lawyer directory, but it does let you explore Twitter by various categories of skills and expertise, with “legal” as one of those categories.

twtrland profile

My profile says I have 205 retweets for every 100 tweets.

Search “legal” to get a list of the tweeters who Twtrland ranks as most influential. Refine your search by location to find the most influential legal tweeters within, say, the U.K. or New York. Refine your search further by gender or by adding skills.

Twtrland is also unique in its profiles of Twitter users. Its developers say that they created it in order to help people decide whether to follow someone. To do this, it analyzes a person’s Twitter activity to create a visual depiction of the person’s “social footprint.” Each profile includes:

  • Tweets per day, showing the average rate of tweets per day since joining Twitter.
  • RT100, showing the average number of retweets the user gets for every 100 tweets.
  • Replies100, showing the average number of replies the user gets for every 100 tweets.
  • Followers demographics, showing the locations and skills of the person’s followers.
  • Close friends, showing the top five users who share the most two-way replies with the user.
  • Top followers, showing the highest ranked followers, based on a 5k sample.

You can drill down through some of these stats to find more granular information about a person’s (or your own) followers. For example, I can see who among my followers is from the U.K., and then further refine my U.K. followers by skills or other facets. Twtrland profiles also compile a person’s most-popular tweets, broken down into categories such as “famous words,” “links” and “retweets.”

If you find a profile on Twtrland where the numbers appear to be out of date, that’s not a problem. Every profile includes a “synchronize” button that instantly updates the stats.

For marketers and power users, Twtrland offers a pro version that lets you track brands and campaigns and perform market analysis. The pro version ranges in price from $19.99 to $249.99 a month.

Photo of Bob Ambrogi Bob Ambrogi

Bob is a lawyer, veteran legal journalist, and award-winning blogger and podcaster. In 2011, he was named to the inaugural Fastcase 50, honoring “the law’s smartest, most courageous innovators, techies, visionaries and leaders.” Earlier in his career, he was editor-in-chief of several legal publications, including The National Law Journal, and editorial director of ALM’s Litigation Services Division.