I’m not going to lie, I was very skeptical when I first heard about Twitter. For whatever reason, I’ve always tried to stay off the trendy social networking site bandwagon. When I gave into MySpace and the Facebook a couple of years ago, I felt like I was betraying my roots. I was a fool! Did I learn anything? Not really! Twitter comes along and people start buzzing about it; I know it’s not going anywhere, but I refuse to jump on board with everyone else… Here’s why that was such a bad move.
If you’re not familiar with Twitter, give it a quick look. The idea behind Twitter is you get to use 140 characters to answer the questions “what are you doing?” If that’s all Twitter was (and that’s all I thought it was for a long time), it would be a giant waste of time. Instead, Twitter is one of the most dynamic methods to get answers to any question you can dream of. Make Use of wrote an awesome article about how to use Twitter as a dynamic search engine. If you can’t get the answers you want using the search method provided by Make Use Of, just ask! There are millions people tweeting away who would happily share their knowledge with you.
Aside from being a dynamic search engine, Twitter is a ridiculously effective marketing tool. When you tweet, all of your followers can read what you said kind of like a huge chat room. If you have 60,000 followers like John Chow, simply tweeting without tags will get you a ton of exposure. Daniel Scocco over at Daily Blog Tips did some tracking and found out the CTR for Twitter was about 1 click per 100 followers. So in John’s case, one tweet should get him about 600 hits; pretty good traffic for typing less than 140 characters and pressing enter!
The problem for most people is they don’t have 60,000 followers, so just a simple tweet won’t get them much on its own. So how can Twitter be used as a marketing tool? Effectively using #topics and talking with @people. When you put a # in front of something it becomes a searchable topic. By picking a popular topic (like #fact), you can increase the exposure to your tweet tremendously. Trending topics are topics that are being tweeted the most at any given time. Many times they are goofy like #itsnotgonnawork or #in10yrs, but there are also times when more business appropriate topics like Apple, iphone, and AT&T are trending. When you put @ in front of someone’s username to talk to them. Other people can read those tweets though. By @tweeting at popular people (in your niche) who are searched frequently, you can greatly increase the exposure of your tweets.
So how does this all relate to marketing? As Seth Godin pointed out, there is a massive attention surplus. Just putting an ad in front of someone isn’t going to make them buy; they might not even take a second look at it. It might make them ask questions though. Twitter allows you to interact with the people you’re marketing to. Interaction builds trust and that leads to traffic, sales, and followers.
Finally, Twitter allows people to share things they enjoy. Most websites have a Tweet button you can press to tweet their site. I’m no expert, but I do know that tweeting sites is a great way to share great information with the community. If you found any of this information useful, maybe you can share with the community too ;-)
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Nicholas Cardot Says:
August 27th, 2009 at 8:36 PM
I was hesitant to join the social media band wagon as well. I created my facebook page just a couple of months ago and started my Twitter account shortly after. I’m happy with both though.
Blake Waddill Reply:
August 28th, 2009 at 9:20 PM
@Nicholas – Yeah, I’m happy I got on twitter. I’ve only been on twitter for about 2 weeks, but i’m up to nearly 500 followers. I’m still not generating a lot of traffic from twitter yet; although, I’m not really putting in the time just yet. Now that I’ve got my page closer to how I want it, i’ll probably start working on marketing more.
nancycarol Says:
August 28th, 2009 at 12:01 AM
Blake, I stumbled your blog about Twitter. I just posted a new article tonight on ehow How To Live In Las Vegas Without Gambling. Would appreciate your checking it out.
R.W. Jackson Says:
August 28th, 2009 at 7:54 AM
Should I be worried about making my twitter account too busy? Will that be a big turnoff?
~R.W.
Blake Waddill Says:
August 29th, 2009 at 10:46 AM
@R.W. – I think after 100 or so people you’re twitter will be too busy to be able to track any specific conversation without using @ to talk to people. If you are talking @ someone, it won’t matter how many people you have on your list because you’ll just search their name/look at what people say @ you. I’m right at 500 people now, and I just use searches to find tweets I want to read.
Sponsored Twitter to make Money on Twitter >> The Props Blog Says:
September 1st, 2009 at 12:20 PM
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