@markevans

Welcome Home, @markevans!

A few days, I did something really dumb.

In trying to create a new Twitter account for a client, I accidentally deactivated @markevans. It was one of those moment when, like Homer Simpson, all you can do is say “Doh!”

According to Twitter, reactivating your Twitter account is not possible, although you would think that it would just be a matter of flipping a switch. Then again, if you’re dumb enough to deactivate your Twitter account, you only have yourself to blame if it can’t come back to life.

That said, I’m a glass half full person, who always believes everything happens for a good reason and that good things will happen to good people. (I also believe at the start of every hockey season that the Toronto Maple Leafs have a good chance of winning the Stanley Cup!)

So, I threw myself at the feet of Twitter’s support team (aka @support) to beg for forgiveness and the revival of @markevans.

Back and forth it went for several days with a steady stream of e-mails from Twitter’s support team, followed by hopeful replies. Just when the situation looked promising, another e-mail would arrive making things look uncertain.

In the meantime, I had resigned myself to @markevans disappearing into the ether, and had set up a new Twitter account, @markeconsulting.

Finally, the good news arrived:

Now, talk about getting good news!

Looking back, the worst part about losing @markevans – aside from the fact it was self-inflicted – was that I had spent two-and-a-half years nurturing it.

In the process, I had pragmatically and patiently selected 300 people to follow, and attracted more than 5,000 followers. To lose all that work was frustrating, particularly the people I had followed because restoring this group would be difficult, if not impossible.

Another important lesson is how dependent we are on third-party services for important parts of our digital footprint and personal branding.

Unlike a self-hosted blog that you control, a Twitter or Facebook account isn’t really yours. Sure you “own” your username but there’s no guarantee it can’t be taken away one day, or the service disappears. So while you spend countless hours nurturing a Twitter or Facebook account, it’s a lot of taking really good care of someone else’s garden.

Not that this will change my involvement with Twitter but it does provide a eye-opening lesson about what could happen if, for whatever reason, your plot of land on Twitter and Facebook suddenly disappeared.

Anyway, welcome back @markevans. Thank you @support, and thanks to everyone who stepped up to follow @markconsulting.

@markevans, Please Come Back!

Last night, I left Twitter.

It wasn’t by designed but in trying set up a new Twitter account for a client, I accidentally de-activated @markevans. Believe me, it a sad story.

In the process, I have discovered that clicking on this button, there’s apparently no going back.

According to Twitter, once an account has been de-activated, it can’t be brought back to life because “account restoration is not available at this time”.

While my departure from Twitter is entirely my fault, it seems strange that Twitter just can’t switch a switch to restore it. At the very least, I’d be happy to start over with @markevans but the username is locked in limbo.

For now, I’ve done a few things: filled out an online form on Twitter’s support section, sent an e-mail to restore@twitter.com and sent a tweet to Biz Stone. If @markevans does come back to life soon, it would be a major miracle but I have my fingers crossed.

In the meantime, I’ve set up a new Twitter account (@markconsulting), and started to re-follow some of the 300 people who had been following. As for the 5,000 people who were following me, it will take awhile before that rebounds.

On one hand, the whole thing is terribly disappointing given it had been something I had nurtured for nearly three years. On the other hand, it’s not the end of the world. Life is full of bumps in the road, and all you can do sometimes is simply take a deep breath and keep moving forward.

To paraphrase Prince, the tweeter formerly known as @markevans is now @markconsulting. If you were following @markevans, come on over to @markconsulting – same great content, brand new name….at least, I hope, for the time being.

Update: The good news is I have heard from Twitter support, and it appears – fingers crossed – that I may be able to gain access to @markevans and my e-mail address. I’m not sure whether this means the account will come back to life with all the friends and followers intact but it’s a positive development.

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