Posts Tagged ‘Tweets’
40 Tried and Tested Twitter Tips
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There are many, many Twitter Guides out there, some are just one person’s preferences based on nothing much but this is one of the best I’ve seen, based on three years extensive use.
Its written by Shea Bennett @sheamus who writes for All Twitter which is part of mediabistro.com. The original article is here: http://www.mediabistro.com/alltwitter/40-twitter-tips_b8973 and contains lots of links to other articles which explain some of these tips in more detail so if you want more, go there. If you want a quick synopsis of the tips, with my edits, see below:
BEFORE YOU BEGIN
Answer these questions: Why are you using Twitter? What are you hoping to accomplish? What could you accomplish?
YOUR PROFILE
Use a photo of YOU as your avatar. You. That’s who we came to see.
A tailored background is nice, but not vital.
Fill out your bio. It’s OK to be witty, but not at the expense of clarity.
Link to your website. Don’t link back to your Twitter profile – that’s several shades of pointless.
The rest of your profile settings are personal preference, but I strongly recommend you don’t protect your tweets unless you really, really have somebody out there you don’t want seeing your stuff. And if you do, maybe a public network isn’t the best place to hang out.
Use a photo of YOU as your avatar
YOU
Be polite.
Be useful.
Be interesting.
Be unique.
Be yourself.
YOUR TWEETS
You only have 140 characters, so make them count.
Manual good, automatic bad. It’s OK to schedule tweets, but don’t automate anything.
Spelling, grammar and punctuation count. Take a moment to write the perfect tweet. It’s always worth the effort.
There’s an important difference between crediting others for their work (courtesy) and thanking for retweets (noise/egotism).
Likewise, don’t be a metweeter.
Never automate ANYTHING
FINDING FOLLOWERS
Engage, engage, engage. Repeat.
Want to know how not to get somebody to follow you? Ask them to.
If you tweet it, they will come. Behave in the manner with which you wish to be noticed, and write about the subjects you wish to discuss.
All the ‘get more followers’ systems are complete garbage. Don’t waste your time or (in some cases) money. Mass following and autofollowing gives you a large but empty network of eternal strangers, none of whom are paying the slightest bit of attention to you.
Strive for 100 true fans, and be remarkable. The rest will take care of itself.
TWITTER ETIQUETTE
Avoid text speak – if you can’t squeeze a proper sentence into 140 characters (or, ideally, less), try, try again.
Find the balance between being overly negative and happy clappy trappy. Neither camp is enormously popular except with others like them. Don’t be somebody you’re not, but if the real you is a jerk, a sap or a fraud, you should probably work on it.
Act as if. (As if you already have the things you want)
Don’t send people automated ‘welcome!’ direct messages when they start following you (especially not with a link to your website!). We hate that stuff. Again, never automate anything.
Don’t be a MEtweeter
YOUR TWEETS (PART 2)
Become an authority in your niche. Everybody is an expert on something. (And if you’re not, read more.)
People look for and value consistency. It’s OK to go crazy once in a while, but find out where your middle is. Middle doesn’t mean boring. It means balance.
The same applies to how often you tweet. After a period of time (usually a few months) you’ll find a natural place where both you and your audience are comfortable with your daily number of tweets.
You always have a choice in how you behave and react to others.
Don’t shoot the messenger.
Again, never automate
LINKS
Always, always, always use bit.ly to shorten your links. It comes with built-in stats which are great, but that’s not as important as the fact that bit.ly is trusted by the Twitter community.
It’s OK to share your own stuff. In fact, I recommend you do it twice per day so you cover the major timezones. For example, I share my content mid-morning in the UK and also mid-morning (late afternoon UK) in the USA (ET).
If you want to get retweeted, leave enough space.
If you’re retweeting somebody else, always credit them. And by them I mean the original tweeter – don’t go mad trying to squeeze everybody and their uncle in.
Even for the Twitter elite, the level of engagement measured by click-throughs and retweets is incredibly low. So relax, and remember it’s all about your long game.
Act as if
FIVE (FREE) BONUSES
There is no perfect Twitter client – whatever works for you works. (That said, I recommend HootSuite for your desktop and iPad and the official Twitter clients for everything else. I’m not an affiliate – these are, in my opinion, the best products.)
Regularly monitor and clear out any dubious applications authorised in your Twitter profile. Don’t be that guy.
Become a Twitter search kung fu master.
Don’t be afraid to block people, doing so for the right reasons. But be aware that Twitter’s block is junk. Don’t rely on it to protect you.
Make Twitter a part of your life, but don’t make your life a part of Twitter. You often do your best thinking offline.
Twitter is a work in progress, and that includes the platform itself and the way that we all use it. Everything is constantly changing.
If you want to get better at using Twitter I recommend you subscribe to All Twitter at www.mediabistro.com and follow @sheamus.
Related posts: How to get more twitter followers
Why you’re not a social media guru / expert / architect whatever
This is a guest post from my Twitter buddy Gary Dickenson. Gary is the head honcho at Creospace, an online marketing and design agency with offices in Norfolk and Scotland and a bit of a foodie. As you can see, he and I share many of the same views.
I won’t beat around the bush, once again it’s time for a bit more expert & guru bashing.
I need a release and a few new thoughts and observations have come to me that I want to share.
So on with the bashing.
When it comes to pseudo wannabes there are 2 categories. The bandwagon jumpers and the plain stupid.
Both can be found on twitter and without having to read their tweets, you just know by a quick read of their bio which category they fall into. The bio’s never cease to make me laugh. Here’s the best SoMe expert one I’ve ever had “Bio: Physician and social media expert”, ‘and’, ‘AND’??
So here’s a few thoughts:
You think you’re a social media expert (SoMe from here in , acronym kindly ‘borrowed’ from Ann Hawkins) because you’re signed up with Facebook, Twitter AND linked in, oh and you do the odd blog post.
No. That’s called normality these days, nothing special about that.
You have added a fancy noun after the words ‘Social Media’ in your bio that self proclaims your awesomeness. To name but a few: Expert, guru, architect, evangelist (one of my personal favourites), pioneer, explorer, mentor, artist, engineer, wizard, shark, authority, specialist, sage, scholar and the list goes on…
No. That’s what you’re calling yourself not what others are calling you. If you have to tell others that’s what you are rather than proving it then get a grip. You’re a bandwagon jumper and nothing more!
You’re a SoMe expert because you’re nice to people and people like you.
No. That’s called being human. I don’t think being human has ever been a specialism (although plenty fail at simply being nice).
You’re a SoMe expert because you work in marketing. Sure that makes perfect sense just like farmers are experts in small garden landscaping?
You’re Definitely a SoMe expert if…
- You don’t practice what you preach.
- You’re followed by 24,000 people…. and you follow 25,000.
- Your twitter follow auto reply has a link to your blog or website in it, nothing else mind, just the link.
- You don’t come up with any original content and retweet tweets from respectable experts from further up the food chain, often.
- You’ve switched your comments facility off on your blog, that will teach those crazy spammers!
- You’ve set up a facebook page but never updated it.
- Your Klout score is THE most important thing EVER!
- Your family, 3 random school friends and your pet dog are your only fans.
- No one has ever recommended you.
- Well when I say ‘no one’ of course your family, 3 random school friends and your pet dog has.
- You once were an SEO expert but hey that’s so 2008 and no one needs SEO any more.
- You were mighty relieved when Google buzz came out because the work was drying up and Quora should see you through to Christmas.
Well I always think it’s better to give than to receive so there’s my opinion, free to you.
Visit Gary’s blog at http://garydickenson.com and see all the comments about this post, add your own or leave a comment below…………..
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