Making Sense of Twitter

18
Making Sense of Twitter a.k.a. #WTF is Twitter? June 12, 2013

description

Basic info and tips and tricks for those who are new to Twitter. Best practices for Twitter for business.

Transcript of Making Sense of Twitter

Page 1: Making Sense of Twitter

Making Sense of Twitter

a.k.a. #WTF is Twitter?

June 12, 2013

Page 2: Making Sense of Twitter

Why me?• I initiated UDM’s social media presence almost 5

years ago*

• I am the founder and cohost of #TCMParty, one of the most popular chats on Twitter.

• Twitter is my true social media love.

• Follow me: @Paula_Guthat

Page 3: Making Sense of Twitter

So...what is Twitter?

A microblogging service which allows users

to post updates of 140 or fewer characters.

Page 4: Making Sense of Twitter

Why Twitter?

✴ Are people using this platform to talk about your brand, your industry, or your competition?

✴ Does this platform align with your demographic?

✴ Is there an opportunity to tell your brand’s story in a new or unique way on this platform?

✴ Do you have the resources to maintain a robust presence on this platform?

✴ Does this platform logically !t in with your existing digital ecosystem?

any social network

*Things to think about BEFORE you join

PR Daily, 5/21/13

Page 5: Making Sense of Twitter

Why Twitter?

✴ What are you trying to accomplish by engaging on [any platform]? In other words, what are your goals? Examples:

✴ Awareness – visibility

✴ Driving traffic to your....

✴ blog

✴ online store or bricks & mortar location

✴ Facebook page

any social network

Things to think about BEFORE you join

✴How will you measure it?

Page 6: Making Sense of Twitter

What’s so great about Twitter?

✴ It is very well-suited to mobile devices.

✴Of the “major” social networks, it’s the easiest one to !nd and consistently connect with your target market.

✴News breaks on Twitter !rst.

✴ It’s the great leveller.

Page 7: Making Sense of Twitter
Page 8: Making Sense of Twitter

Twitter terms, part 1• “Follow” – you’ve opted to see all of a person’s or a

company’s tweets in your timeline except those replies where you don’t follow both parties

• “Tweet” – Also called an update. Public message to EV-eryone that is following you.

• “Mention” or “@mention” – Public message to speci!c person/people

• Add 1 character before an @name and that tweet will show in all your followers’ timelines, not just that person

• “Direct Message” – Private message to a speci!c person; you can DM anyone who follows you

Page 9: Making Sense of Twitter

• “Interactions” – Your mentions, plus follows and favorites

• “Retweet” or “RT” – Posting someone else’s tweet to your followers

• “Modi!ed tweet” or “MT” – Some Twitter apps allow you to edit a tweet before retweeting. When you do this, change the “RT” to “MT” to indicate there have been edits made to the original tweet.

• “Timeline” – the running list of tweets and RTs from everyone you follow except those replies where you don’t follow both parties.

Twitter terms, part 2

Page 10: Making Sense of Twitter

What is a #hashtag?• A word or phrase added to a tweet so that

it will show up in searches

• If the word is in the tweet, you don’t need to repeat it for it to appear in search results

• Use a hashtag whenever possible, but 2 hashtags per tweet is usually enough

• Can also be used as a comment on the tweet’s content. Use judiciously for business, if at all.

Page 11: Making Sense of Twitter

How to tweet like this

not this

Page 12: Making Sense of Twitter

Getting started Which hashtags to track?

Who to follow?✴LISTEN before diving in

✴Keywords and searches

✴Make Twitter lists – they can be private

✴Begin by offering interesting content & starting conversations

✴Also follow a few new accounts every week

Page 13: Making Sense of Twitter

Twitter for business• Optimize your pro!le

• Continue to listen (FREE market research)

• Mindfully promote your product/service ()

• Develop relationships with customers, business partners and media by offering helpful, interesting content and conversation

• Customer service

• Having fun

Page 14: Making Sense of Twitter

Twitter for everyone• Experiment & observe to determine how

many tweets is “too many”

• The most interaction occurs early in the week between 10 a.m. & 4 p.m. Eastern. Take your followers’ time zones into account.

• Schedule sparingly

• Ideal tweet length is no more than120 characters to allow for RTs. Less is better!

• Find your RTs and thank people for them

• Look at what people are not saying

Page 15: Making Sense of Twitter

not likely

Page 16: Making Sense of Twitter

Free/low-cost Twitter tools

HootSuite, SproutSocial, Sendible, Buffer

www.whentotweet.comwww.twittercounter.comwww.followercheck.com

mobile: Tweetbot, HootSuite, SproutSocial

Page 17: Making Sense of Twitter

Twitter Analytics

Page 18: Making Sense of Twitter

Recommended reading