twitter

50 Ideas on Using Twitter for Business

by Alice on October 21, 2009

In teaching a webinar on using Twitter for business, I was searching for some useful tips and found this.  I thought I would share it with all of you.

by Jennie Gearhart on March 3, 2009

We really can’t deny the fact that businesses are testing out Twitter as part of their steps into the social media landscape. You can say it’s a stupid application, that no business gets done there, but there are too many of us (including me) that can disagree and point out business value. I’m not going to address the naysayers much with this. Instead, I’m going to offer 50 thoughts for people looking to use Twitter for business. And by “business,” I mean anything from a solo act to a huge enterprise customer.  (Original article by Chris Brogan)

50 Ideas on Using Twitter for Business

First Steps

  1. Build an account and immediate start using Twitter Search to listen for your name, your competitor’s names, words that relate to your space. (Listening always comes first.)
  2. Add a picture. ( Shel reminds us of this.) We want to see you.
  3. Talk to people about THEIR interests, too. I know this doesn’t sell more widgets, but it shows us you’re human.
  4. Point out interesting things in your space, not just about you.
  5. Share links to neat things in your community. ( @wholefoods does this well).
  6. Don’t get stuck in the apology loop. Be helpful instead. ( @jetblue gives travel tips.)
  7. Be wary of always pimping your stuff. Your fans will love it. Others will tune out.
  8. Promote your employees’ outside-of-work stories. ( @TheHomeDepot does it well.)
  9. Throw in a few humans, like RichardAtDELL, LionelAtDELL, etc.
  10. Talk about non-business, too, like @astrout and @jstorerj from Mzinga.

Ideas About WHAT to Tweet

  1. Instead of answering the question, “What are you doing?”, answer the question, “What has your attention?”
  2. Have more than one twitterer at the company. People can quit. People take vacations. It’s nice to have a variety.
  3. When promoting a blog post, ask a question or explain what’s coming next, instead of just dumping a link.
  4. Ask questions. Twitter is GREAT for getting opinions.
  5. Follow interesting people. If you find someone who tweets interesting things, see who she follows, and follow her.
  6. Tweet about other people’s stuff. Again, doesn’t directly impact your business, but makes us feel like you’re not “that guy.”
  7. When you DO talk about your stuff, make it useful. Give advice, blog posts, pictures, etc.
  8. Share the human side of your company. If you’re bothering to tweet, it means you believe social media has value for human connections. Point us to pictures and other human things.
  9. Don’t toot your own horn too much. (Man, I can’t believe I’m saying this. I do it all the time. – Side note: I’ve gotta stop tooting my own horn).
  10. Or, if you do, try to balance it out by promoting the heck out of others, too.

Some Sanity For You

  1. You don’t have to read every tweet.
  2. You don’t have to reply to every @ tweet directed to you (try to reply to some, but don’t feel guilty).
  3. Use direct messages for 1-to-1 conversations if you feel there’s no value to Twitter at large to hear the conversation ( got this from @pistachio).
  4. Use services like Twitter Search to make sure you see if someone’s talking about you. Try to participate where it makes sense.
  5. 3rd party clients like Tweetdeck and Twhirl make it a lot easier to manage Twitter.
  6. If you tweet all day while your coworkers are busy, you’re going to hear about it.
  7. If you’re representing clients and billing hours, and tweeting all the time, you might hear about it.
  8. Learn quickly to use the URL shortening tools like TinyURL and all the variants. It helps tidy up your tweets.
  9. If someone says you’re using twitter wrong, forget it. It’s an opt out society. They can unfollow if they don’t like how you use it.
  10. Commenting on others’ tweets, and retweeting what others have posted is a great way to build community.

The Negatives People Will Throw At You

  1. Twitter takes up time.
  2. Twitter takes you away from other productive work.
  3. Without a strategy, it’s just typing.
  4. There are other ways to do this.
  5. As Frank hears often, Twitter doesn’t replace customer service (Frank is @comcastcares and is a superhero for what he’s started.)
  6. Twitter is buggy and not enterprise-ready.
  7. Twitter is just for technonerds.
  8. Twitter’s only a few million people. (only)
  9. Twitter doesn’t replace direct email marketing.
  10. Twitter opens the company up to more criticism and griping.

Some Positives to Throw Back

  1. Twitter helps one organize great, instant meetups (tweetups).
  2. Twitter works swell as an opinion poll.
  3. Twitter can help direct people’s attention to good things.
  4. Twitter at events helps people build an instant “backchannel.”
  5. Twitter breaks news faster than other sources, often (especially if the news impacts online denizens).
  6. Twitter gives businesses a glimpse at what status messaging can do for an organization. Remember presence in the 1990s?
  7. Twitter brings great minds together, and gives you daily opportunities to learn (if you look for it, and/or if you follow the right folks).
  8. Twitter gives your critics a forum, but that means you can study them.
  9. Twitter helps with business development, if your prospects are online (mine are).
  10. Twitter can augment customer service. (but see above)

{ 1 comment }

Case Study on using Twitter to Broadcast Your Message

by Alice Heiman on April 19, 2009

Great information from my friend Barry.

I just sent a Tweet on Twitter with a link to Mitch Gooze’s latest blog post. I have almost 2000 followers on Tweeter. Each of those have 250-500 followers. Many of them will re-tweet my message into their networks.

That one blog post that Mitch posted will not only be picked up by his direct subscribers using some form of a blog reader, but now will be in front of 2000 people exponentially expanded through their networks. THAT’s THE POWER OF USING AND LEVERAGING SOCIAL MEDIA.

We’re finding that about 10-15% of our website visitors are coming from the various social media sites we are active on – primarily LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook. We see this trend growing into the 25-33% range. Our website ecommerce sales have tripled in just a few months.

Not to pick on Mitch, but here’s an opportunity for him to use one of the linkedin applications so that anyone visiting his profile will see his latest blog entries displayed. He can also show his Twitter stream of comments reinforcing his blog post. We’ve only touched the tip of the ice-berg on how Mitch could put his message that distinguishes him as an expert in his field in front of more targeted people than he could ever imagine – and it’s all FREE (I’ll take that back – there is a personal time investment involved – for most it could be 30-60 minutes a day).

I posted an article about this concept in the news tab a while back. Think of Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook as “glue” that binds together a lot of your other keynote speaker/ sales training subject content activities. What good is a blog unless you’ve got your message in front of 10000 or 100000 targeted people who would like to hear about what you do?

Barry Deutsch

Barry Deutsch

Partner and Executive Recruiter at Impact Hiring Solutions – Co-Author of “You’re Not the Person I Hired”

{ 0 comments }

Selling with Social Networking

April 1, 2009

For some reason I often find myself on the bleeding edge of things,  the cutting edge is good for me, the leading edge is too late but the bleeding edge hurts sometimes.  Selling through Social Networking is and interesting topic to me.  Lots of people are putting on webinars about how to use Facebook or [...]

Read the full article →