How to get more mileage out of Twitter – Followers

by Alex Pomery

Twitter has quickly become an important channel for any business looking to further its online exposure.  Building out social assets (Twitter feed, YouTube channel, Facebook group etc) with branded content is a great way of seeding your content on platforms that masses of people frequent.  This increases the likelihood of them coming into contact with your content/company – engaging the individual where they like to hang-out – as opposed to leaving all your content ‘siloed’ on your website.

There are many guides and lists of tips on how to maximise your use of Twitter.  I want to focus on a few things out there which can really work for you.

Twitter – Followers

Increasing your number of followers is high up on the agenda of most users.  If this is important to you it’s likely you are a small to medium business, blogger or an individual covering a niche area.  As big advertising budget is probably not available, a good way to increase your followers lies in participation within the Twitter-sphere.  For example, finding and following others who share your interests is an excellent option – since they are likely follow you back (no really, they are).

Here’s a few key ways to approach this;

  • Use ‘Twitter – Find People’ to search for keywords that relate to your business, for example, ‘media’- this search will show you everybody who mentions ‘media’ in their bio/username
  • Find large existing players in your industry and follow their followers
  • Use a product like TweetAdder to help automate the process of finding relevant people and adding them – the demo is free and it’ll significantly cut down on the time it takes to follow people

If you’re a larger player in your field and have a large audience, perhaps through website traffic or email distribution numbers, then this enables you to be less granular in your approach.  Instead you can take advantage of a (your) large audience by adding a ‘Follow Me’ message on your;

  • Website – a prominent position is necessary
  • Email send out – go for more than just a non-descript line in your signature to see strong results
  • Facebook page
  • LinkedIn Profile/Group – new to LinkedIn
  • When you leave a comment on a blog
  • Etc

This will allow you to reach a significant percentage of your potential target audience, enough to gain you a great number of followers.  Even if you don’t have a large existing ‘fan-base’ advertising your Twitter feed in this way is still very much advisable.

Twitter – Tweets

The viral nature of Twitter offers more potential for increasing follower numbers, so facilitating this is always a good idea – i.e. writing your tweets in a way which encourages retweets.

  • Incorporate photos, by using apps such as TwitPic or for mobile uploads use Tweetie or Twitterific.  Photos are often heavily retweeted and people can comment on them
  • If you have an event coming up make sure you hash tag the name of the event.  Hash tags work by creating trending topics, so this approach may give you additional exposure in the trending topics list on the homepage
  • Tweeting passwords or offer codes is great for maximising retweet potential

Increasing your exposure on Twitter involves a concerted effort and there are many thoughts on best practise.  Try the tips above for an immediate impact, after that it’s all about engaging, regular tweets… and remember, encouraging engagement is the key to success.


Posted: December 2, 2009 @ 4:47 pm

Online video should be fit for purpose

by John Hobson

YouTube has an interesting video doing the rounds – it’s called the 100 Greatest Hits of YouTube in 4 Minutes. What you may notice is the lion share of clips are unrehearsed, unplanned and are UGC – I counted under 20 that I thought were actually staged.

‘Will it Blend’ stands out as the only direct brand penetrating this top 100 (discounting Rick Ashley) and is also noticeable for its linear production values. Traditional preoccupations about quality and detail are almost without exception turned on its head here (this is down to many factors which I will address in a future blog post) but ultimately its obvious brands have to think differently on digital on video.

Replicating the magic of mishaps is just one of the challenges for online video producers – and then you have to make sure your brand is in the background when it happens! The way we film for TV clearly has to be different when we film for a fraction of the screen real estate.

For the time being, don’t be paralysed by the need to get content going viral – by its definition very few videos push through to this hallowed ground – be rational in your projections and scope and most importantly understand who you are targeting.  By all means use the online tools available, seed the clip wherever relevant and link whenever possible but don’t be unrealistic – KPI’s that don’t hit disappoint – which is no good for anybody.

Video sharing is ultimately a democratic process – if it’s good it will grab attention, be passed on and gain in popularity. If its crap it will be lost – the next candidate is only one email away.


Posted: November 5, 2009 @ 2:13 pm

Brands Continue to go Social

by Nick Wild

(taken from Jeremiah Owyang’s blog) As Brands Continue to ‘Pollinate’ the Social Web, Expect Corporate Websites to Aggregate
Categories: Aggregation, Future of Social Web, Pollination, Social MediaPosted on July 1st, 2009

Brands are pollinating the social web with easy-to-share features like Sharethis. As conversations splinter across the web, brands must prepare to aggregate those same conversations on their corporate website. As a result, the trusted conversations will centralize back on product pages.
[Trusted conversations have fragmented to the social web --shifting the balance of power to communities]
Social Pollination: Brands Currently Spreading to Communities

Why: Brands are trying to let their corporate and social content spread to many different communities in Facebook, Twitter, Email and others.
Examples: Any blog post, press release, or product page that encourages readers to share the content to other locations. Any brand created Facebook fan page, flickr account, or Twitter account.
Risks: Letting content spread to other locations causes some angst, as brand managers now must monitor content and discusions elsehwere on the web. The command+control mentality of “our corporate website is central” no longer holds true as people can share content using browser features like social bookmarking tool Delicious, or sharing links in Facebook.
Vendors: A variety of tools have appeared such as sharethis, addtoany, addthis and others. Incumbant players include: email, Facebook, Twitter, and Delicious that encourage content to be shared within those communities.


Posted: July 1, 2009 @ 11:37 am
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