Mar 10
Tip #2: Participate (be Relevant, contribute, share, respond)
For a business or business person to be relevant in the Twitter conversation going on, they need to participate. Ask questions and elicit responses; respond to other user’s questions. Tweet not only your own relevant contributions but retweet (RT) other Tweets that you find valuable. Promote and/or attribute others where there’s a reason to do so. You can build a following faster if you appear trust worthy (easiest way to do that is by actually being trustworthy), know your subject matter and don’t look like you are just out the get them to buy something.
The graders and ranking sites look at both your following as well as your activity. There’s a number of search tools that will help you here to see who is talking about what and who is specifically responding to you (for example with @replies). These tools can help you determine where you might want to jump into a conversation and build that relevance. This is important in being noticed by searches from other users. You build following with contribution, relevance, and responsiveness.
The number of keywords in your tweet cloud is also important. Are you an active Tweeter? If so, what are you tweeting about? Are you relatively consistent in what you discuss? There’s a big difference between using Twitter like text messaging and blogging each trip to the grocery store and using Twitter for business with a targeted, specific approach to your online identity and the topics you take on. Again, the grading web sites will pick up on this targeted approach and quickly move you to “elite” status in your chosen keywords if you Tweet with some forethought.
Part 3 and 4 to be released later this week
Follow Urvi on Twitter
Mar 10
Following up from the last set of Social Media Marketing webinars where we covered the basics of Twitter and other Social Media tools and sites, I have been getting questions about using Twitter for business purposes. In response to those questions, I wanted to write out a short list of Twitter for Business best practices and some of the most popular tools that make these practices possible. This list of tools, techniques, and what is possible is changing and expanding almost daily with the explosion of Twitter usage and discussions of Twitter merging with some other site/partner. Thus I expect to stay current on using Twitter for business purposes we will need to repost more on this topic from time to time.
Tip #1: Be Real
It is important that you completely fill in the registration and profile information when signing up on Twitter. If you set up your Twitter Id as a business name it is less real than using a personal name. If you still want the business name in there, you could possibly add the company after the persons name (like Dell computer has been known to do with names like “PatrickAtDell”). In the profile section, post your website. I wouldn’t recommend a short URL here if you can avoid it since this is your brand and the full link helps in your SEO rankings. Also in the profile section you enter in relevant search terms in your profile description.
With the profile limited to 160 characters, you want to get the relevant keywords included. By doing so you don’t have much space to talk about the business specifically. However you can also squeeze in more content about your business including other websites, urls, logos, or content by uploading a custom Twitter background. Be aware though that the search engines and tools people are using to find you will not pick up words or content located in the background image. That’s why the keywords have to be in your description.
Finally and possibly most important is that you need to upload a picture. People want to see who they are communicating with, even if you are representing a company. If Twitters don’t think you are real, they are less likely to be interested in following you and learning more about your business (we are Twittering for Business here remember). If you try to hide with no picture, just a logo, an incomplete profile or no description, the cynical side of social media marketing will take over, people will assume the worst and they won’t follow you.
Stay Tuned for More…
Follow Urvi on Twitter
Dec 05
For those of you who are on Twitter right now you may have heard about the recent stir with @mattbacak and about his press release talking about his recent accomplishments on Twitter. With all the hoopla about Twitter Grader and how Matt Bacak was listed as a Twitter Elite, I decided to do some of my own testing to see just how accurate Twitter Grader can be.
On my Twitter profile @UrviMehta when my location was listed at Detroit, MI and I graded my profile I was part of the Twitter Elite with a rank of 6 in Detroit, MI. However, when I changed my location to Detroit, Michigan (spelling our the entire state name) I am ranked #2 in Twitter Elite for Detroit, Michigan.
Essentially Twitter Grader is more of a “fun” tool in its current ranking measure. Perhaps Twitter Grader should consider state abbreviations and full spellings of the state names as the same location. My point is that Detroit, MI and Detroit, Michigan is one in the same and should be one list instead of two separate lists depending on how you spell out your location.