Top Five
Twitter Tips For Business
(With A Healthy Dose of Skepticism)
By Philippa
Gamse
eMarketer
recently reported that many of the smallest businesses in the United
States don’t believe that their customers can be marketed to on
social networking sites. Yet research also shows that social sites
are being used to find local businesses, especially by younger
customers. So how should a small business approach Twitter? These
are my top tips:
Three Do’s:
1. Do Use It For
Research, Not Just Marketing:
You’re probably already using Google News Alerts to keep up with the
latest on your clients and areas of expertise (if you’re not, you
should be!)
Twitter is great
for tapping into the chatter on these things too. Apps like
Tweetdeck and Hootsuite allow you to set up search columns which
automatically display the most recent tweets on any subject of your
choice. See the latest buzz, and keep an eye on the competition!
2. Do Time Your
Tweets:
92% of retweets occur within the first hour. So the time at which
your tweets go out is pretty important. Think about the “peak
viewing time” of your target audience(s) – are they business people
or busy moms? Which time zones are they in?
Use an application
such as Hootsuite to send out your pre-written tweets at optimal
times. You can send out the same tweet more than once to hit
different markets, but don’t continuously recycle the same message –
you’ll get flagged for spam.
3. Do Track Your
Results:
Any tweet that you
want to bring traffic to your website, generate sales or leads, etc.
must contain a clickable link (too many folks forget to include this
call to action and lose out on opportunities). It’s really
important to track what you’re doing to evaluate results – you want
to know what types of tweets work for you, and what times of day are
best to send them.
So, you also want
to keep an eye on your Web traffic reports to evaluate your Twitter
success. Do visitors from Twitter mostly leave your site
immediately, or do they produce the outcomes that you want? Since
you’re restricted to 140 characters, using a free URL shortening
service like Bit.ly is very helpful – and it also gives you
automatic click-through tracking for every link.
And The Don’ts:
4. Don’t Be
Seduced By Big Numbers:
It’s a wonderful ego boost to have hundreds or thousands of
followers. In fact, Peter Shankman recently referred to this as
“the new penis envy!” But bear in mind that lots of people follow
you because they expect you to follow them back as the accepted
convention. So they don’t necessarily care that much about what you
write. Notice who does respond or retweet your postings and
celebrate your loyal followers. Just remember that quantity doesn’t
guarantee quality on Twitter.
5. Don’t Have
Unrealistic Expectations:
A recent survey
found that over 70% of tweets get no response at all, and an average
of only 6% are retweeted. Think about it – how many people are you
following? How many tweets do you actively read every day, let
alone click on any links, retweet or reply.
Of course, it only
takes one response that’s exactly the right one to make a huge
impact on your business. But don’t expect every tweet that you send
to be life (or business) changing!
Read other articles and learn more about
Philippa Gamse.
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