10 Great Ways To Use Twitter To Your Business's Advantage |  | Visited: 554 |
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| | by Amy Armitage June 22, 2009 |
| Amy Armitage |
Amy Armitage is the head of Business Development for Lunarpages. Lunarpages provides quality web hosting from their US-based hosting facility. They offer a wide-range of
services from dedicated servers and managed solutions to shared and
reseller hosting plans. |
| Amy Armitage
has written 2 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Amy Armitage... |
Twitter is the latest web-centric communications service to explode
onto the scene, and businesses have moved in rapidly. However, a little
discretion goes a long way, as the users of "social" sites and services
have demonstrated that they will stomach only so much commercialization
of what they consider their personal space. As MySpace evolved from an
upstart new kid on the block where everyone let everything "hang out"
to a part of the Rupert Murdoch media empire, people who'd had enough
began looking for other places. This influenced the rise of Facebook.
Now that Facebook has begun acting like a "regular old corporation,"
too, folks are on the search again.
Your company can most definitely benefit from using Twitter. The
primary use for it in business is to listen, because, as every
top-performing salesman knows, listening is more important than talking
most of the time. You want to hear from every customer, vendor, client,
industry leader, journalist, activist, colleague and competitor who has
anything to say about your product, service or business. Twitter has
much in common with old-style networking, like early morning meetings
at diners and water-cooler chats, except it's been "virtualized" for
21st century knowledge sharing. With that brief introduction, let's
look at 10 great ways to use Twitter to your business's advantage.
1. Listen more, talk less: If you just think of Twitter as another
way to "post" your messages and advertisements, you're missing the
whole point and your following will probably be nonexistent. Spend more
time listening to what others are "tweeting" (posting) about you and
you will gather valuable information. When you do post a message, make
it something people want to know, not something you want them to know.
2. Find your niche: Twitter's uses are limited only by your
imagination, or someone else's if you're fresh out of ideas. Don't
think of what you can get, but what you can offer and what you can
learn. You may want to share knowledge, you may want to obtain it, or
you may just want to assure customers, colleagues and others that you
are available to them. You will benefit to the extent that you listen
and stay engaged, which means referring back to #1 a lot.
3. Develop a personality (or a few): A number of business bloggers
have commented on how well Twitter works to humanize an otherwise
impersonal entity like a corporation. A fresh and interesting
personality attracts followers, and some successful firms even allow
numerous voices to reach out from within the company's offices and
cubicles.
4. Eavesdrop: There are several good tools for monitoring what is
being said, starting with Twitter's own search field. Search for your
term(s) and when the results are displayed, you will also get a list of
the current most-popular searches (to the right) so you always know
what's hot at the moment. The site monitter.com, as the name implies,
was developed specifically for use with Twitter, to allow simultaneous
multiple searches.
5. Build your audience: The first thing to do is post a few tweets
to get a handle on how it all works, of course, and dedicate some study
time to see what your competitors and companies in the same industry
are doing. Make use of the "Find People" function on the top of the
Twitter page to find people in your own company, your current clients
and colleagues, old classmates and friends, etc. Use the "@" reply to
connect directly with people, to make sure they see your tweet, and
discuss matters of interest to them. When they respond with the @
reply, other folks following them may notice you and choose to follow
you, too.
6. Follow the followers: You should find out who else your
followers are following, as that can give you fresh insight into the
types of people to seek. Use the various search methods (see #4 above)
to find subjects that relate to your industry, and pay attention to
who's talking about these matters. Don't be a broadcaster, be a
conversationalist, and if you do Twitter right, you will build a
following daily.
7. Be human: Too many people, from firms both large and small,
represent their firms poorly by appearing to be robots on a fixed
schedule. They crank out PR verbiage and automated data and don't offer
anything for followers to grab hold of. You have to "throw them a line"
or you will sail right by everyone.
8. Be polite and respectful: This means that the rules for eating
Thanksgiving dinner at the neighbor's house are in effect-no politics,
no religion, unless you're a politician or a clergyman, of course.
These subjects have no place in a business conversation, so leave them
out.
9. Play nice: Don't get emotionally involved or rant about a
person, place or product. One marketing blogger called Twitter "a ship
we are all traveling on," so it's important to act appropriately-or be
forced to "walk the plank."
10. Stay positive: Don't be pessimistic, and don't whine or
complain about what's wrong with this or that industry or the world in
general. People will follow people they like, who offer something of
value, who are upbeat and who stay on an even keel. Of course, some
situations require a serious, even solemn approach, but those are the
exceptions and should be handled delicately. Anyone can bellyache,
gripe, moan and groan. A leader, on the other hand, offers solutions.
Bottom line? Twitter is a tool, and a good one, for keeping
conversations going with stakeholders, potential customers, colleagues
and even competitors. It takes real-time management because it's a
real-time tool, but when it's done right Twitter can be an important
addition to your sales, marketing and business communications arsenal.
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