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Twitter Strategies That Work

April 13th, 2010

Do you tweet?  Are you on twitter?

If you know you should be, but aren’t, or if you have set up an account, but don’t know what to do with it, then this is for you.

Twitter is a huge fad these days.  It’s all over the place, being talked about by many people in the marketing field, particularly those involved in social media and online communication.  But most people still don’t know about Twitter – recently I was having supper with my family, and no one at the table knew what Twitter was or was using it.  So if you aren’t on Twitter yet, don’t feel bad – you’re not alone.

There is a lot of information on the internet about how to get set up with a Twitter account, twitter etiquette, how to attract 10,000 followers in one week, and more.  I assume you can find that information if you need it.

Twitter as a Marketing Tool

I am writing this for businesspeople who have heard of twitter, are not yet using it (or not yet using it effectively) and who want to know how to get started.  I recently met with a franchisor who knew she should be on twitter, and had actually set up an account for her franchise, but wasn’t doing anything with it because she didn’t know where to start or what to do.

I spent five months doing direct Twitter experimentation.  One the one hand, I shouldn’t admit it (Twitter is supposed to be a communication tool for the real you, right?), but honestly I needed to see what would happen if I took different actions.  So I set up a number of different Twitter accounts and tried different strategies to see what would happen.  (If you want to connect with my real Twitter account, follow me at www.Twitter.com/katrynharris).  It was fascinating to see what really happens.

My assumption is that you are on Twitter because you think it will benefit your business in some way; grow sales, increase brand recognition, build strategic partnerships, get customer feedback, keep you in touch with the market, or some other business building strategy.  I am assuming that you are not on Twitter just to be social and connect with friends (although even for a business account, that will become part of the experience).

I make no claim to be unbiased.  As you will see, I think some of the commonly used Twitter strategies are poorly thought out or dangerous for companies to use.  I recommend that before any company starts using Twitter, you first look at the question:

What do I want to Accomplish?Twitter Screen

  • Do I want to grow sales directly?
  • Am I trying to bring traffic to the company blog?
  • Do I want to learn about what my customers thinking and get product feedback?
  • Is this a brand building exercise?
  • Am I trying to find people who will make good strategic partners?

Just like goal setting and traditional marketing, to use Twitter effectively, you first need to decide what you want to accomplish.  Then you can take the steps that will help you meet your goal.  As you read through the next section, keep your goal in mind.  That will allow you to quickly discard the Twitter strategies described if they will not bring you closer to your goal.

The main strategies that I have seen people use on Twitter are:

1. Twitter maniacs – These people get as many followers as possible, indiscriminately. I have a hard time seeing the value of this, unless it’s an ego thing; ‘I have 20,000 followers – look at me’.  This is unlikely to add value to your business and I certainly don’t recommend it.

2. Niche ambassadors – You pick a niche and find people related to that niche & follow them; tweet information about your niche – get found by people who are interested in that niche.  This can be useful if you have a niche business and are looking to attract customers or strategic partners – maybe people who share your interest in the niche and who offer a complementary service or product.  The key here is to slowly increase the number of followers and people you follow so you can keep connections with the people in your circle.  Ignore people outside of your niche area of interest who follow you and only follow people who relate to your niche.  This can build strong interpersonal relationships in your area of expertise and can be very valuable in terms of building brand, strategic partnerships, and even customers.

3. Rounded Brand Tweeters You start by building a profile around things you are interested in – this will usual be professional interests with a company account, but even with a company account, you want to have some of the personal interests showing through.  Twitter is about interacting with people, so don’t have different people posting to a corporate Twitter account every day – your followers won’t be able to get a coherent sense of who you are or know what to expect.  Building a profile around areas of interest can be very useful; for example, if you run a yoga studio & are interested in politics and international finance, you might follow people who are into yoga, political or news organizations and people talking about international finance.  The blend of interests can help make your account seem well rounded, and will attract people with similar interest.  This type of account is most likely to support a branding strategy where the goal is to get known and to build your profile and build relationships.  It may lead in an indirect way to sales but that is more incidental than causal.

4. Sweet Tweeters – Tweet lots of quotes and inspirational sayings.  This will get you followers and lots of retweets.  However it is unlikely to lead to growth for your company.  It does work to some extent for people who are sole practitioners focused on drawing traffic to their blogs / websites.  If your tweets make people feel good, they will associate positive feelings with your Twitter account, and are then more likely to read and follow links that you post.

5. Twitter-educators – Select a niche & tweet lots of information (links, news articles, other people’s tweets, events, etc) that will be of interest to people in your niche.  Many marketing experts recommend this as a way to establish an identity as a brand leader in your space.  This is ideal for people who already have a public profile that they can leverage so that they get a number of followers right off the bat, but even regular companies can follow this path.  It takes some regular time to keep providing valuable tweets, but this is a strategy that can certainly bring you lots of online traffic if you are consistent about it and have frequent links back to your company blog/website.

6. Controversial Tweeting – Some very high profile people tweet in such as way as to create controversy and get talked about online in an ongoing manner.  By having people attack them, and then attacking back, they build up a base of very loyal followers.  The downside to this (and the reason I would never recommend it for a company Twitter account) is that you also get a large group of people with strong negative feelings about you.  This is a good way to ‘stand for something’ but very dangerous to any sales efforts you may have underway.

7. Twitter Salesbirds – These are usually very clearly company accounts that have regular posts about their company products / benefits / special offers / events.  They can gather a number of followers, but it is slow going since most average people don’t get huge value from hearing about how wonderful a company considers itself to be.  It’s very easy to breach twitter etiquette with this type of account.  These can be effective in generating sales if you have a very obvious value proposition and, usually, relatively low ticket items that do not require any kind of ongoing relationship.  In that case, your tactic may be simply to drag as many one-off visitors as possible to your website / links, and now worry about providing ongoing value.

Twitter is hopefully one sales / marketing tool among many.  Remember, the keys to success are knowing what success looks like for your company, then using that knowledge to select your strategy, implementing and then measuring using your key metrics, and changing direction if necessary based on your results.  With a good plan, Twitter can be a great boost to your business, and a lot of fun along the way.

Join Open Box on twitter: www.twitter.com/katrynharris or visit our blog, read our stories about experimenting with Twitter and share your Twitter stories and questions in the comments section of the blog.

Best Practices, Business Growth, Communication, Franchise, Marketing, Twitter Experiment

Twitter Roundup – One Month In

March 30th, 2009

Magpie Heaven

If Twitter is anything, it is lots of information in a fast moving environment.  Picture a revolving door in a busy shopping mall; as varied as the folks who pass through it and constantly changing.  Other adjectives: interesting, colourful, amusing, random & enlightening.  It’s a lot of fun to see what’s coming through the ‘tweetvine’ & to follow the various links.  It makes me feel a little bit like a magpie with piles of neat shiny objects to go after.  The challenge for me is that I don’t have ‘extra’ time.  My time is tightly allocated and very much in demand.  So how do I get the best use out of Twitter?  There needs to be a balance between the magpie attraction and the usefulness/direct relevance of the information I find.  Like any social networking site, I need to keep track of my time by quickly valuing the links and contacts I encounter.

Building relationships

Twitter has been a fascinating way to make initial contact with a large number of people that have similar business values/interests.  I can see their tweets (and they see mine) and we can both decide whether;

 a) the other person is someone I want to know, and

b) whether they have value to offer.

Then we can get in touch.  So far, people I’ve ‘met’ on twitter, I’ve followed up with by email, Linked In, their websites, etc.  The trick here is to ensure that I am the opposite of the magpie.  I need to make sure I am collecting only that shiny bits that are valuable at the end of the day and not just picking up connections and contacts that may be fun but distracting.

Automatic Refollow

With Twitter, you can set up your account to automatically refollow any other peep who choses to follow you.  Alternatively, you may prefer to opt out of this as some people treat twitter like a popularity contest; gathering up as many followers as they can, rather than as a B2B social networking environment.  There are two avenues of thought on this and it depends on your purpose for being on Twitter.  If you choose the automatic refollow, you need to later review the followers to make sure they have your interests at heart (similar purpose), otherwise your ‘tweetstream’ will be overloaded with useless & time wasting micro-blog posts.  Which do you choose?

So Far

Time spent to date:  roughly 21 hours (time is decreasing now that I ‘get it’)

Questions I have:

 1) Do people really try to keep up with all the flow of information? 

2) What are the best third party tools to use with Twitter to save time?

3) What’s with the ego thing of checking how many followers I have?

ROI:  Introductions & connections have proven to be advantagous.  I have useful information to send prospects, have been introduced to HARO, and have located a network of international experts in a variety of fields.  So far so good.  Time will tell if the usefulness of this ‘tweetvine’ takes root or fades out like a spring annual in my garden.

Communication, Twitter Experiment

Twitter Roundup – Day 14

March 10th, 2009

Twitter Roundup

After a week and a half checking out Twitter, I have to admit I am at least slightly hooked.  I am spending far too much time on Twitter.  I’ve found a lot of fascinating websites and articles (some of which I will share here), relating to business, franchising, trends, communication and search engine optimization/online marketing. 

I’ve found people to follow who have great information in my areas of interest (franchises & franchisors, business growth, search engine optimization and online content development). 
Interestingly, some of the blogs/people, I couldn’t find through Google searches.  For example, I had a hard time finding franchise blogs that I thought were really valuable via Google.

The one basic question that still remains unresolved for me is whether Twitter is where potential customers spend time, or more of a place to come in contact with potential strategic partners and others who are passionate about online marketing?  I have asked a couple of people I know who have been using Twitter for a while for their thoughts on this, and so far most people say they have actually found strategic partners and interesting information.  I would love to hear from someone who has actually sold product/services from twittering.  In fact, consider this an invitation to get in touch if you would like to do a brief interview about how you found actual customers through Twitter!  Just post a comment saying that you would be willing to do that, with your Twitter name and I will get in touch via Twitter to learn more.

Useful articles/websites from Twitter posts

Top 4 Success Saboteurs for Entrepreneurs: http://www.theperfectbizfinder.com/blog/beat-the-top-4-saboteurs/

Winners of the 2009 Franchisee Satisfaction Awards: http://jan.freedomblogging.com/2009/03/09/happiest-franchisees-6-are-oc-companies/10293/

Challenges for Women in Business: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sponsored/business/businesstruth/4934018/Women-in-Business-The-bias-against-women-entrepreneurs.html

5 Great Companies to Form in 2009: http://www.thecompanymerchant.co.uk/blog/index.php/2009/01/five-great-companies-to-form-in-2009/

Tell People What You Want Them to Do For You: http://www.doshdosh.com/tell-people-what-you-want-them-to-do-for-you/

50 Social Entrepreneur Blogs to Watch: http://evancarmichael.com/Tools/Top-50-Social-Entrepreneur-Blogs-To-Watch-In-2009.htm

and just for fun… http://www.brepettis.com/blog/2009/3/3/the-cult-of-done-manifesto.html

So Far

Time spent so far:  probably 6 hours (much of that following fascinating links posted by various tweeters)

Questions so far:  How in the world are people finding my profile to follow?  Why would someone be following >1,000 other people?  What does that mean to follow at that point?  Surely no one has time to read all the tweets from many thousands of people?  Are any of my potential customers using Twitter?

ROI: Nothing direct yet, but coming in contact with some fascinating people – more potential strategic partners than customers, it looks like to me.  Some good franchise blogs that I wasn’t able to find via Google searches with very valuable information.

Communication, Search Engine Optimization, Twitter Experiment

Twitter Experiment – Why and Day 2

February 26th, 2009

To Twitter or not to Twitter?

I have been hearing all the arguments for Twitter for a while.  Even though I run a software / website development company, I tend to be slow to adopt new technologies.  I don’t want the latest version or the latest fad and I’m too busy to try the latest great toy out unless I see value from the getgo.  If it’s not going to grow our business or our customers’ businesses, then I probably don’t want to know.  Fortunately our Creative Director, Jeff, just loves all the new stuff and raves to me about all the possibilities for this and that as it comes out!

We had a great conversation yesterday about Twitter – pros (mostly Jeff) and cons (mostly me).  Jeff says it’s important to be part of the online conversation and a great way to come in contact with people you would never have come across otherwise.  I was trying to figure out how to find anything useful (there’s so much information out there – I find information filtering more of a need than how to get more information) and whether it would take a lot of time or whether it would actually bring value.

The Experiment

Being experiential and empirical, I decided to try it out and see what happens.  Is all the Twitter buzz true, or are the people I know who say that it’s just a big time consumer right?  Will it actually add value to our company to have a Twitter account?

I already had a twitter account created, but had never done anything with it.  So yesterday I went in, found a couple of people I know & a couple of people I don’t know but who are in our industry (franchise and franchise services) and set it up to follow them.

For those like me who have trouble finding anything useful in the default twitter search, Jeff sent me a link to a good search tool; search.twitter.com, which allowed me to find some conversations that I found interesting.  I also uploaded a picture, set up my basic profile, and changed the background image.

Day Two

This morning I was surprised to find that I had acquired some followers – some of them the people I had chosen, but also a couple of others.  Note that at that point, all I had was a profile – no tweets, nothing.  I did do a couple of tweets today, and found some very interesting links to a variety of websites and articles that are useful and/or interesting. 

Time spent so far:  probably 2 hours (some of that figuring out how it all works, some of that browsing the tweets & profiles).

Questions so far:  with so many tweets coming out, do most people just browse the most recent ones from the people they follow, or do they really go through them all from when they last checked in (even skimming)?

ROI: aside from the interest factor, nothing so far, but I have learned about some interesting people out there & seen some good websites….

Communication, Technology, Twitter Experiment