Category: Branding, Marketing, Advertising

  • The Definitive Guide To X (Twitter) Marketing Strategy

    The Definitive Guide To X (Twitter) Marketing Strategy

    Note: This original (updated 1-10-2025) post is over 7,000 words and will take about 25 minutes to read. You can purchase it on Amazon in Kindle or Paperback if that is more convenient.

    Also, if you’re a bit overwhelmed, I have a free course for X (Twitter) for Business.

    X marketing is too valuable to ignore for any type of business even in 2025. Yet so many businesses undervalue X in their overall marketing strategy. Don’t make an emotional decision about using a marketing platform because of who owns it. That’s a big mistake.

    Let’s fix that. I know you can improve with a few tweaks.

    After implementing all of this advice and about six months of practice, you’ll be as good as I am. Awesome. You can rock your company’s marketing world or go start a social media management agency. Why not? 

    And, if you’re ever curious, go look at my account. Unlike most “marketing experts on Twitter,” I model the behavior I preach. Also, since I’ve written about Twitter extensively since 2011, I’ll be quoting myself — a lot.

    If you’re looking for a , I suggest that you start with my 10-series . Each video is less than 10 minutes long. Please don’t skip a video because you think you know it. I give in each video that builds throughout the course and shorter than a movie.

    Here is the Ultimate Guide to Twitter Marketing in 2021

    Twitter Marketing: Optimize Your Bio.

    To do list

    The first thing you’ll want to do when you start your Twitter account, or get serious about marketing with Twitter, is optimize your bio. Your bio is your elevator pitch and your first opportunity to get people interested.

    Think about flirting in dating. You want people to be interested but still understand what you’re all about. If you “provide solutions for your clients” that is too vague. Every business provides solutions. Do you build websites? Say that. Are you a gift shop owner? Say that. Do you write novels? Say that. 

    • Pin a tweet to your profile that leads to your website! This is super important.

    Twitter shows your bio in the sidebar on related tweets, when people hover over your username, and in emails from Twitter. This is important real estate. Don’t clog it up with hashtags or emoji (that goes for your name, too). Make this easy to scan. 

    Using generic keywords in your bio, meaning writing for your customer, is how Twitter will suggest your profile to other people. I literally got a new client in December of 2020 because my account was suggested to them. So, yes, you can get work from Twitter. 

    “Your account should have a header, a clear photo, a website, and a bio. Your bio should be clear to people outside of your niche and be optimized for keywords.” Bridget Willard (Yep, that’s me.)

    Make sure your logo fits in the circle of a 500 x 500-pixel square. It should be clear on a mobile phone. Test it. Don’t trust your 42” monitor. That’s not how most people see your brand. Your Twitter header should also be clear. 

    If you use a photo, make sure it’s of your face and that you’re not shaded by a hat or wearing a mask. The point of a photo is to create a connection and to stand out while people are scrolling.

    Remember, people go to your bio once. They go to see who you are and whether or not you’re interesting enough to follow. Or they may have been referred to your business and they are now validating your online presence to decide if they want to work with you.

    “People aren’t going to your Instagram bio, your Facebook page, your Twitter profile if they already know you.” Bridget Willard

    Twitter Marketing: Be Present.

    One of the best tips to marketing yourself or your brand on Twitter is to be present. Make it a point to sign in with purpose or intent. No one likes talking to a distracted person at a party. It’s the same on Twitter. 

    Relaxing on a weekend

    Pay attention to your notifications and be in that conversation. Yes, it could take hours for a reply, and it is totally fine to respond later. With that said, how would you like to be treated online?

    If you say hello to someone in person and they don’t respond or acknowledge you, how do you feel? Would you like to feel ignored? Most people don’t. 

    Being present also means being self-aware. Be at your best online. Remember when you’d go to someone else’s house when you were a kid and your mom told you to be on your best behavior? Do that online. 

    It is way too easy to tweet off a quick response or a flippant answer or a stream of consciousness that isn’t edited and lacks sensitivity. How do I know? I’ve done it. I’m not proud of those moments, but we all have them. A few of my friends have texted me after those moments saying, “Are you okay?”

    As much as you can, be present on Twitter. Are you angry, annoyed, upset? Get off the internet. Go for a walk. Calm down. It’s not that you shouldn’t be upset, but you should never react online; always respond. That’s how to be present on Twitter.

    “It’s tempting to react to political news from your brand on Twitter. Unless your brand is Saturday Night Live, don’t do it. You’ll be fueling trolls and undermining your brand. It’s your brand. Protect it.” Bridget Willard

    Twitter Marketing: Follow Everyone.

    It’s funny how many people use social media in a backward way. They use media for their own opinions, marketing, and entourage building. That’s just an RSS feed or Press Releases. If that’s what you want to do, so be it. Don’t expect Twitter marketing to “work” for you.

    Marketing is a social science. Twitter Marketing is about people and what they do and what they like and how they respond. The only way you can understand the gorillas is to go be with them. Watch. Listen. Observe. Then you’ll know how to get closer to the silverback as Dian Fossey did. 

    The first thing your brand communicates on Twitter when your following to followers ratio is lopsided is that you don’t care about anyone else. So, why should they follow you? The person who stumbles upon your account with 50,000 followers who only has 96 knows you don’t care. 

    They may follow you because now you look like a celebrity and, for some reason, we give celebrities a pass. Or you may only be listed. Either way, it is a great way to be off-putting to your audience, show that you are tone-deaf, and more. 

    Okay, if you’re Nike or Chevrolet or Apple, you can do that. However, most of my readers are small business owners. You’re excited to get your first 1,000 followers on Twitter. By the way, the first thousand is the hardest. The only way you will get those is by following people back.

    “To get customers on Twitter it is important that you are — are you ready for this? — social. People always think of the media part of “social media” and conveniently forget the work part. Yes. The work is to interact with others.” Bridget Willard 

    As an aside, Twitter has following to follower glass ceilings at 1:1. If you’re following 2,000 

    people but only 200 people are following you, then you won’t be able to follow any more people until that ratio is closer to 2,000:2,000. This is a quirk of Twitter as no other social media platform does this. 

    I’ve experienced these limits at 2,000, 5,000, 9,000, 14,000, and 19,000 followers. The largest account I ever grew was Riggins Construction at 20,000 which took six years from 2009-2015 before I left to start my marketing career. 

    This is why I unfollow people who don’t follow me back. I use who.unfollowed.me for this. 

    Twitter Marketing: Make Lists.

    Creating lists on Twitter is vital to your Twitter marketing. This allows you to segregate your followers by demographic giving you the power of a focus group at the click of your mouse.

    Social Dilemma

    My ultimate guide to using Twitter lists is a great starting point for how to start a list and which lists you should create. 

    Twitter lists enable me, as a one-person shop, to personally and successfully manage so many Twitter clients. I’m not outsourcing my Twitter work. No, I do as much manually as possible. Why? Because a good suit is tailored to the person. You can get a cheaper suit at Men’s Warehouse, but it won’t fit as well.

    Effective Twitter Marketing means that you are spending as much time interacting with humans as possible. Understand them. How are their views shifting? What do they like? What don’t they like? 

    WordPress products and agencies often purchase swag for conferences that they think is cool. But if they spent time reading tweets from their audience, they would know what the people would think is cool — and useful. 

    Don’t just order a fidget spinner because it’s a fad. Why? Because your product isn’t a fad. It isn’t a distraction. It’s serious. 

    The best way to approach Twitter Marketing is with an ear to listen. 

    X (Twitter) Marketing: Don’t Use Too Many Hashtags.

    The goal of Twitter marketing is to entice people to read your tweet and click on your link or profile. Hashtags can distract from that goal. So many people see hashtags written everywhere that they have the impression that adding a hashtag is magic. Boom. You’re going viral now, baby. 

    Even the Noom app uses hashtags in their copy. In their app! It’s painful to read. I know why they are doing it. They’re trying to be friendly. But man, I wish I could get them to stop doing it.

    We scan; we don’t read. 

    People on Twitter are scrolling on mobile devices. They may be using TweetDeck or Hootsuite to browse Twitter on their desktop or second monitor. Either way, the hashtag creates a link (because it is a link) and it is a distraction to your call to action. 

    I’ve been using fewer and fewer hashtags lately. It isn’t affecting my impressions at all. My top tweets get quite a bit of engagement even without hashtags. 

    bridget top tweets GIF Dec 2020

    Twitter Marketing: Format Your Tweets.

    Knowing that your audience scans, and doesn’t read, shapes how you write your Tweets. 

    Making your tweet scannable is a great way to be noticed. Once your tweet is noticed, people are more apt to engage with the tweet, either by replying or clicking on the link. 

    I presume you have your blog formatted so that Open Graph will pull in your 1200 x 628 featured image and meta description. 

    format your tweet twitter marketing

    This is how I format my tweets.

    You don’t have to use all 260 characters.

    [Intriguing quote or question]

    [Call to Action]

    [short link]

    [Hashtag1]

    [Hashtag2]

    [Hashtag3]

    When it comes to emoji versus GIFs, my preference is for GIFs. First of all, they’re native to Twitter. Secondly, they don’t take up space or break up your body copy (which makes it hard to read).

    “GIFs go where Emoji cannot. Emoji are fantastic for decorating text messages. Emoji can be awkward when it comes to screen readers or the average user who scans messages.” Bridget Willard

    Insider Tips

    • Don’t start a post with a username. This is considered a reply. Instead, use a period first “.@bridgetmwillard thanks for the useful advice.” You can also rewrite the Tweet so the username isn’t first. “Wow! Thanks for the advice, @bridgetmwillard. It’s very useful.”
    • Using GIFs in your posts is way more effective than emoji.
    • A/B Test your tweets if you don’t believe me. Hashtags aren’t magic. 
    • Mix up how you share your blog post. Extract quotes. Don’t just share the headline over and over again.
    • Auto DMs are a great way to get unfollowed. 

    Twitter Marketing: Use Short Links.

    Update 2/15/25: Bitly is now using interstitial ads. So, better to have an ugly link than that UX.

    I’m a huge fan of short links. Long links get cut off and are ugly. As a user, I notice that I will pass over tweets that have ugly links. They’re too hard to copy/paste RT (Old School RT) and I just figure the person isn’t social. They’re probably automating their tweets which means they probably won’t reply.

    With that said, I used to use Revive Old Post on my site (but the API got $$ so the service got $$). I loved it when my blog posts were cycled every x amount of hours and I used a shortened link. I am back to using Buffer now. But use your judgment. It’s 2025.

    When I’m curating Tweets, I like to use Google’s Campaign URL Builder to add my name as the referral source. I’m sneaky like that. I am, after all, the campaign. I found the tweet. Handpicked, baby. Handpicked!

    campaign url builder screenshot

    Twitter Marketing: Share Other People’s Content. 

    share other people content twitter marketing

    Sharing other people’s content is one of the best Twitter Marketing tactics. You came across an article in your Internet search and it gave you a wow. You learned something. You smiled. You cried. Share it. 

    Share it with intention. Do the work to find their Twitter handle. Don’t just mindlessly press buttons. That’s not hand-curation. That’s random. That’s pedestrian. Anyone can do that. 

    And while I’m at it, mindlessly using an RSS feed to automate tweets is also not the best way to do it. What if that person or business tweets about something that goes against your brand standards?

    What if they love React and you have tweeted that it’s garbage? What if you’re curating content for Ninja Forms and they’re using Gravity Forms? It’s not good versus bad. It’s about alignment. 

    Twitter Marketing: Read Articles Before You Share Them.

    Social Dilemma 1

    Reading articles before you share them goes hand in hand with not automating your Twitter feed. This isn’t always a good versus evil issue. It’s about whether or not the article aligns with your brand. 

    Does the article require a subscription to read? This is primarily why I don’t share the Financial Times anymore. I get their articles through Curio, but they don’t even have four free articles a month as Harvard Business Review does. If you always share content that requires a subscription, people who follow you will start ignoring your shares.

    Is the article well written? No offense to outsourcing, but it becomes obvious when a non-native speaker writes copy on a website. Even if the reader isn’t fully aware of why it feels wrong, they’ll bounce. That won’t align with your brand.

    Does the article bombard the reader with ads? This is a huge issue for me. On my phone, I can choose “reader view” in Safari. I can’t choose that on my laptop. (Or maybe I just don’t know how.) Either way, you get the point. It’s a bad user experience. 

    What you share is an extension of your brand. Do you want people to associate you with that experience? I’m guessing the answer is no. 

    Worse, the article could advocate for something you’re against. You may hate the WordPress editor but the article shows people how to use blocks in Gutenberg. You may preach about accessibility but this article doesn’t even use the ARIA button role. You drive a Ford, the article is about the new Chevy truck. You get it. We call this cognitive dissonance. The audience sees it as tone-deaf and out of touch.

    Twitter Marketing: The Reply Button is Powerful.

    Every time I teach Twitter Marketing, I encourage my students to use the reply button. This is the most under-utilized Twitter tool for impressions, followers, and click-throughs. 

    Social media is about building relationships. Twitter excels in this area. The only way to build a relationship with a person is through small talk. The chit chat that so many people dread is the back and forth on Twitter with replies. 

    Guess what? It works. This is how I have built every account I have. The vendors I use today, I built relationships with on Twitter. More than that 85% of my client base comes from Twitter.

    When big brands like Noom reply to my Tweets, I’m more likely to mention them again. As I have several times in this article. This is the subconscious drive to reciprocate. It’s powerful. Be kind. Reply. Engage. 

    Twitter Marketing: Participate in Twitter Chats.

    Twitter chats are my favorite part of Twitter. This is a live chat that is threaded with a specific hashtag. They usually take place once a week at the same time and last an hour. 

    Sadly, this last year, I haven’t made the time I should to participate in my favorite one which is #DigiBlogChat.

    This chat is hosted by my BFF Carol Stephen and by Larry Mount. It’s been going on for quite a few years and is always fun and inspiring. 

    “Since we crowdsource the topics for our chats, we have an extremely engaged audience. There’s Tripp Braden, Randy Clark, and the enthusiastic Beth Staub. John Lewis, who also runs #Innochat is a regular. Finola, Maricar, and Mitch Mitchell regularly weigh in. My friend @MistressPrime occasionally visits. @CharlesMcCool and @jpretorious are there, too. Then there are @nina_wag and @htindesigner. We couldn’t forget our friends at @interprosepr! Sandy of @CreativeWoodVT has been a friend for a long time. Loni of @JorgensonLocker is also a regular on the chat! And @JKatzaman is always making us laugh!” Carol Stephen 

    Hands down, Twitter chats are the best place to find like-minded and active people on Twitter.

    There are so many great chats, it’s hard to keep track of them all.

    Tweet Chat Formatting

    Most of the time a Twitter Chat has a specific format. The host will tweet the question with Q1, Q2, Q3, and the hashtag. Everyone else tweets with A1, A2, A3, etc with the hashtag. 

    Lots of people reply but that isn’t necessary. Neither is quote tweeting. But if you do quote tweet, then be sure to use the hashtag in your part of the quote tweet. See why I don’t like quote tweeting for Twitter chats? (Say that five times fast.)

    Hosting a Twitter Chat

    I’ve hosted Twitter chats in the past. They’re a lot of work but great for the brand. This was primarily how I built up the Riggins Construction Twitter Account with #ConstChat. 

    It’s a big-time commitment but also gives you quite a lot of content to post on your blog for your brand. I did it for a while for GiveWP but they decided not to keep it going. I posted the recap on my own blog for an example. Here’s one of my recaps for SEO for Nonprofits. Embedding tweets in your blog is a great way to give them a longer lifespan.

    Twitter Marketing: Share Your Blog Posts.

    Sharing your blog posts should be a pillar of any Twitter Marketing plan. I mean, we’re all for relationships and learning but we all have to earn a living. Yes. I said it. Marketing always has a goal. You want to share your expertise online. Why not share it on Twitter?

    “People use Twitter to read and to discover information. Customers will use it to validate you the same way people use Yelp or TripAdvisor.” Bridget Willard 

    The great thing about Twitter is that its culture tolerates volume and repetition. You can share your content on Twitter as much as every third tweet. This is unheard of on any other social media platform. For clients, this is how I share their content. For myself 

    Of course, Twitter doesn’t replace email marketing. That’s the best way to get an engaged audience reading your posts. Your campaign links will tell you the story. What does Google Analytics say?

    Now, this screenshot from Google Analytics shows that my average session duration (time on site) is just over a minute. That’s probably because I’ve not been blogging as regularly as I should. Aim for two minutes.

    social time on site

    Twitter Marketing: Let People Know You’re Accepting Clients. 

    Work only with the best

    Twitter is a great opportunity to let others know that you’re accepting work or new clients. Of course, if you’re a retail establishment, Twitter is great for nurturing. For business-to-business (B2B), your business model is a bit different. You’re likely not selling widgets.

    People ask me all the time, 

    “Hey, Bridget! How do you get clients?”

    Me:

    “Twitter.”

    Them:

    “Well, what do you mean?”

    Me:

    “I’ll tweet out that I’m accepting clients and then I get DMs. I schedule a meeting and then send them an invoice and go for it.”

    You have to tell people that you’re accepting clients. Your tribe and peers on Twitter need to know. People who refer work to you need to know. It’s okay to tell people you have availability. You won’t look desperate. 

    If you’re worried about how to phrase that, DM me and I’ll help you craft a tweet.

    Twitter Marketing: Be a Polite Human.

    Having good manners is Twitter Marketing 101. This is the edge that the Boomers and GenXers (like me) have over Millenials and Zoomers. We make eye contact. We wait for someone to respond. We say “please,” and “thank you.” It matters.

    “If you’re a baby boomer, you already know a lot about how to be social. For instance, would I have to ask you twice what the “magic words” are? Would you know what elements make a good letter? Could you go on a picnic and just be at the picnic, without having to whip out an electronic device? There you go! Each one of these instances is a good reason why you, as a Boomer, is a perfect candidate for social media.” Carol Stephen 

    I’m not really sure where my generation went wrong with raising their kids but it is what it is. We didn’t train them to have good manners. (Oh my gosh, if you’re offended, I’m sorry. But seriously. Am I not wrong?)

    You use Twitter for sales and marketing. All good salespeople value people — as a person — even if they aren’t the decision-maker. This is the key to relationship marketing. 

    “You have these opportunities because people know you. And because they know that you actually care about them. And the only way it works is if you actually care about them.” Bridget Willard

    Twitter Marketing: Reply to Every Tweet!

    Everyone matters when it comes to your Twitter Marketing. When someone replies to your tweet, then answer them. If they send you a tweet, reply. If they share your definitive guide to Twitter Marketing that actually works, then thank them. 

    Whatever you would do if the person were standing right in front of you (socially distanced, of course) then do that. 

    Twitter Marketing: Don’t Forget Where You Came From. 

    Do you remember how hard it was to get those first 500 followers? The first 1,000? One way to lose touch with your audience is the lack of empathy. You were once “the little guy.” You were the egg on Twitter. 

    “Great leaders would never sacrifice the people to save the numbers. They would sooner sacrifice the numbers to save the people.”  Simon Sinek 

    When you come to Twitter with the intent to be generous, you’ll demonstrate the kind of leadership that lasts. And you know how to get followers on Twitter? It’s easy. Be a leader. 

    “Generosity is a key attribute of leadership. We all respond well to those who give more than they take. And when they ask for favors (retweets, links, store purchases) many of us are happy to oblige. We’re your biggest fans, so why not follow back?” Bridget Willard

    A person with an open mind realizes that they have something to learn from everyone. Remember how hard it was. Don’t tweet out that you’ll retweet someone. That’s just asking for accolades. Just do it. DM people with tips. Share someone’s blog post that tickled your intellect and aroused your joy. Be their hero. Even just for 30 seconds. 

    Twitter Marketing: Share YouTube Videos.

    One of my favorite features of YouTube is the ability to share a video at an exact timestamp. This is a form of social hospitality. Quoting the person (or yourself) and the exact timestamp makes it easy for your followers to click on it and watch it from that exact moment.

    If you’ve included your Universal Analytics code on your YouTube account, those views will show in Google Analytics, which is really nice. 

    But you can share videos from other people, too. We love video. But why should we watch this video? When we see tweets with a quote and then a link, we’re more inclined to click on it. 

    Including YouTube in your Twitter Marketing strategy is just smart. Some people don’t like to read articles and others never watch video. Have something for everyone, and you’ll be the best host ever! 

    Yes, social media is hospitality.

    Twitter Marketing: Use Twitter for Business Development.

    If you’re not using Twitter Marketing strategies for business development, boy you are missing out! It is a gold mine of people who are interested and searching. People are tweeting questions all day long. 

    Set some time aside once a week to search for questions that you can answer. Then find the latest tweets that look like a good opportunity to reply. Maybe you don’t have the best answer but you cc (carbon copy) others and bring them into the conversation. 

    People on Twitter have the intent to learn. Providing helpful information will create that spark of interest that can lead to a bigger conversation.

    Listening on Twitter is the best way to validate and update your marketing personas. In all likelihood, your Biz Dev efforts will bring this to the surface.

    “Marketing personas are legitimized stereotypes. When’s the last time you updated your company’s personas? Instead of relying solely on a marketing persona based upon “Bob,” you can actually see what Bob is tweeting about. Bob from 10 years ago liked IPAs; now he collects wine. Time to update the “Bob” persona.” Bridget Willard

    Twitter Marketing: Give People Credit.

    Part of being a polite human being in your Twitter Marketing is giving people credit. That is to say, if you found a very useful article because Robert Nissenbaum tweeted it, then give him credit. On Twitter this is a hat tip or h/t.

    It’s so annoying when you share something and people don’t even acknowledge that you were the one who shared it. It’s a good way to get unfollowed. 

    Yes. That’s the end of the section. Go and think about this. I’ll wait. 

    Twitter Marketing: Use the Native App.

    Video conferencing

    I love Hootsuite for Twitter Marketing so much. Firstly, because it’s free for up to three accounts. Now, I only use it for Twitter because of the column and search features. They allow me to track hashtags, use my lists, and have a search for people tweeting out my website. This is super important if you want to listen to what your customers may be saying or what is resonating. They may have typed your handle wrong or something. You know? Another great thing about Hootsuite is that its mobile app is very similar to the web app. 

    With that as my only caveat, to be as agile as possible with your Twitter Marketing strategy, it’s important to use the native app or web app/page. When Fleets came out (Twitter’s version of stories) a lot of people were confused. Why? It was only available on Twitter’s mobile app. Any other app didn’t show Fleets. It wasn’t an option on desktop and certainly wasn’t shown in TweetDeck or Hootsuite.

    Small UI changes matter. UI changes can affect your metrics and cause you to shift tactics. Hootsuite, for example, doesn’t show Twitter Retweet Button retweets. It’s so lame. And frustrating to a social media manager. But, Hootsuite is limited by Twitter’s API. So, go where the rules are made. It’s Twitter’s playground.

    The one thing you can expect with online marketing is change. Change comes. It comes at the most inconvenient times and the user interface can change dramatically. I mean, remember when Instagram moved the heart (notifications) to the top and swapped that with the shopping bag? We were all pressing the shopping bag for weeks. Muscle memory and UI matters when you’re creating a marketing strategy.

    “Twitter management isn’t for the faint of heart. It’s important to be a practitioner; stay in Twitter as much as possible. This allows you to see any UI/UX and feature changes that Twitter implements. That affects your tactics.” Bridget Willard 

    As professionals who market on platforms we cannot control, it is even more important that we use the native platforms as much as possible. In a world full of lazy marketers, being first matters. (Yeah, I said it.)

    Twitter Marketing: Be Consistent. 

    For Twitter Marketing to be effective, you need to be consistent. This is why I recommend spending time on Twitter every day. Plenty of people follow trends and jump on this bandwagon or that new tech. That’s fine. Let people jump over to Hey.com or Parler. The rest of us will stay on Twitter and keep winning for ourselves and our clients.

    Consistency is the key in marketing. It’s the key in athletics. It’s the key in weight loss. It’s the key in language learning. Consistency is marketing gold. 

    People are distracted. You can be the reliable lighthouse they turn to. 

    With that said, it’s better to go dark if you’re going on vacation and don’t plan to respond. Scheduling tweets just to schedule tweets is lame. Be present. Social media managers often help one another out for covering vacation times. 

    Now, a word about automation. I know, I talk about automation a lot. 

    In 2011, one of our Twitter friends passed away. He was a big deal. It was the first time I cried and cried over someone I had never met in person. He was consistent. Reliable. 

    Though he used automation, he always replied. Unfortunately, because he used automation to tweet out articles with certain keywords, his account kept tweeting after his death. It was very frustrating for his wife.

    I schedule out tweets for my clients but only two weeks out. Things happen. Tragedies happen. National emergencies. School shootings. You need to be able to quickly pause your scheduling at any given moment. 

    Twitter Marketing: Follow People in Your Industry.

    Following others in your industry is an important way to be seen. Twitter is a perfect way to connect with others in your industry. You can find them through search, other people’s lists, and/or industry hashtags.  

    An easy way to find the big names in your industry is to look for event hashtags. (Remember when we had in-person events before COVID?) Those events will list speakers, attendees, and volunteers. People who attend conferences tend to be the industry’s movers and shakers. There could be an argument that there are people at home with plenty of expertise, but if they’re not tweeting, we’ll never really know them. Will we?

    Find the hashtag, look at the people using it, follow them, and put them on your list. Follow and list. Follow and list. Pretty soon this behavior will be natural to you. And then people will turn to you for when they’re looking for someone to teach their class on Angular or lead the kayaking expedition in the Pacific Northwest. 

    Twitter Marketing: Follow People in Your City.

    Following people in your city and creating a list is a great way to understand the local culture. This can be a county or a metropolitan area. When I lived in California, my city only had a population of 28,000. So I also followed people in Orange County and put them on that list. 

    Spending time on your Twitter list for your city allows you to interact with your local community. You may be invited to speak or meet others who would be great businesses to know. We do business with people we know, like, and trust. This is an aspect of human behavior that is timeless. It won’t change when the next big thing comes along. 

    Even on TikTok, the Texas people follow the Texas people. We like to be around people who choose to live near us. 

    Following people in your geographic location is even more important if you intend on marketing your business services or products to them. Or if you move like I did. You’ll want to assimilate and use the language they do. In California, I would say “Guys!” In Texas, we say “Y’all!” You’ll learn about the nuances and about what matters here. 

    In Texas breakfast tacos are made with bacon. Sausage at the last resort is fine. But they’re made with bacon and you get them at the gas station. This isn’t like gas station sushi either. It’s legit. No joke. Laredo Taco is inside Stripes (the gas station). You’ll want to learn about your new culture before you start making a faux pas. 

    Twitter Marketing: Spend 5 Minutes a Day in your Home Feed.

    twitter marketing affinity

    Twitter Marketing is a lifestyle, not a quick fix. You’ll want to work it into your daily schedule. I always recommend people spend five minutes in the morning and five after lunch. It really depends on how fast you want to grow. Twitter is a numbers and volume game. If you’re not treating Twitter seriously, you probably don’t have any notifications anyway. Oh yeah, when you get serious, don’t get push notifications. That will drive you crazy. 

    One of the good things about spending time in your home feed is that you see opportunities. I started to notice, for example, that people were really struggling with writing their own speaker bios. This was during the heavy conference season for WordCamps, so I offered to write their bio for them. 

    This gave birth to six bios, so I tweeted again. So then I expanded my secret menu. I mean, if In-N-Out can have one, why can’t I? I began writing page content, editing WordCamp talk pitches, and more! That cash always came in handy. Especially during the building of my business and inevitable client loss.

    By now, I’ve written over 40 speaker bios for many of the people in WordPress you’d recognize. Because of that, I was asked to give a workshop at WordCamp US to teach people how to write a friendly bio of themselves. 

    Even if your intention on spending time in the home feed isn’t business development, you’ll pass by people in the halls of the Internet you never would have noticed otherwise. This world is a lovely, full place. There are so many amazing people to get to know. 

    Twitter Marketing: Log in with Intent. 

    When you begin anything intent drives the results. This is because we do what we practice. If your intent is to become a better writer, then text your friends in complete sentences. If your intent is to practice mindfulness, then set an alarm for meditation. If your intent is to hit a home run, then look at where you want the ball to end up. Intent matters.

    Twitter marketing without intent is aimless and purposeless. You’ll feel drained and bored. You’ll get sucked into mini debates about politics or how to pronounce “GIF.” Chunks of time will pass by without any real results. You haven’t helped your brand. You haven’t given back to the world. You haven’t encouraged someone. 

    Level up your Twitter Marketing by logging in with the intent to be helpful. Find two or three tweets that you can reply to every day. Yes, every day. Twitter works if you work it. 

    Twitter Marketing: Look at Your Analytics.

    twitter marketing more than stats

    Data is important but it needs context. Google analytics or Twitter analytics — neither are the be-all, end-all. However, you’ll want to look at your data sets and compare and contrast them.

    The caveat to data is that data only comes from what is measured. Some people browse in private mode. They search the Internet on duckduckgo.com or yahoo.com instead of Google. They don’t use Gmail. They may take out their SIM cards all the time or swap them out. Maybe they turn off their WiFi at night or have masking routers.

    Data is a picture of the past. This is why spending time online interacting with your audience is so important. This is how you get data in real-time. This is data as it happens. People grow and evolve. Data is an autopsy. What are people doing now? 

    Another problem with data is that it only shows what you’ve done. If you have only tweeted on Tuesdays, then Tuesday is your best day. Beyond what you measure, and what will inevitably be excluded, you can’t measure affinity. You can’t measure brand awareness. You don’t know what people are thinking. 

    What I do like is the tweets to profile visit ratio. This tells me that people have seen a tweet and gone to the profile.

    “I like the tweets to profile visit ratio to be above .20. The profile visits [metric] is important because it means that a user saw your tweet, clicked on your username/handle, and then looked at your profile.” Bridget Willard

    Twitter Marketing: Cycle Your Content. 

    The best way to cycle your content is to share it with different copy and hashtags. It may hit someone at a different phase in their life or business cycle. 

    The most important part of Twitter Marketing is staying top of mind. Meaning, you want them to see your tweet when they’re trying to remember who bakes those crazy cakes. Wait, I forgot to ask her about copywriting. Oh yeah, I was thinking about buying lockers. Oh cool, I’ll refer my client to that person for their website build. 

    Resist the temptation to retweet yourself. First of all, it looks really self-centered. Also, if it didn’t hit your audience the first time, maybe rewrite the tweet. This seems obvious but I’ve been in some very, um, tense conversations on Twitter about this. I mean, do you, Boo. But then again you’re reading my tips. So. What’s the worst-case scenario? Try it my way for a month and if you don’t like it, I’ll give you your money back. Also, did you know that any user can turn your retweets off? It’s true.

    When it comes to cycling your content and a plugin like Revive Old Posts, be sure to make the time interval an odd number. If you start sharing tweets at 8:00 AM and set it up with an eight-hour interval, then your tweets will go out every eight hours. Meaning, your blog post will be put out on Twitter at 8:00 AM, 4:00 PM, and midnight every single day. That limits who has an opportunity to see your tweets.

    I always use an odd number with a half for my interval settings on Revive Old Posts. I am always changing my frequency between 7.5 hours, 13.5 hours, 17.5 hours, and 23.5 hours. Sometimes, I just want to test the waters or adjust for the volume of tweets I’m adding in real-time. Test it out for yourself. 

    Twitter Marketing: Don’t Use the Retweet Button.

    Twitter existed before the Retweet Button. I have a whole blog post that goes into great depth on why you shouldn’t use the Retweet Button. It’s even a featured snippet on Google. (Yep. I’m pretty proud of that. 

    featured snippet retweet button bridget

    Your Twitter Marketing is stunted with the Retweet Button (not the comment retweet, but a plain retweet). Here’s why. The retweet button ends a conversation. There is no way to reply. You get a notification that someone retweeted you. But you can’t reply. At least, you can’t easily reply. 

    To reply to a retweet, you have to click on the person, start a tweet, and then thank them. I used to do it all of the time. Sometimes I still do. It’s so much better to make your own tweet. You want people to see your face in their Twitter feed. You want your logo to be recognized in the Twitter feed. That’s Branding 101. So, why would you share someone else’s flyer at your event?

    GIF thank a retweet

    Twitter Marketing: Be Patient!

    Seriously. Trying Twitter for one month isn’t long enough, my friend. It is a big part of your whole marketing. You probably won’t see a rise in clicks until about month three. Business comes later. This is for the longevity of your business. Not just for today.

    “Stop looking for tangible results.” Bridget Willard 

    There is no such thing as a first-click lead. No one is going to see your tweet for the first time, click on it, see your thing, and buy it immediately. It takes 7-10 touches to make a sale at the very minimum. It always has and it always will. Why? Because the humans behind the screen are still, well, human. 

    “You’ll never get first-click leads from Twitter. I say never, but it’s probably an exaggeration. Asking social media to solve your lead-generation problem is short-sighted at best. First of all, it will fail — miserably. Secondly, your focus on leads will cause you to consciously or even subconsciously make decisions out of fear and desperation. Those are almost never good decisions.” Bridget Willard

    Twitter Marketing is a Long Game!

    Twitter brings a brand awareness component that raises the effectiveness of all of your marketing efforts. 

    Our marketing efforts are only a failure when we quit. 

    build relationships list others twitter marketing

    Recapping The Steps

    1. Optimize Your Bio.
    2. Be Present.
    3. Follow Everyone.
    4. Make Lists.
    5. Don’t use too many hashtags.
    6. Format your tweets.
    7. Use short links.
    8. Share other people’s content. 
    9. Read articles before you share them.
    10. The reply button is powerful.
    11. Participate in Twitter chats.
    12. Share your blog posts.
    13. Let people know you’re accepting clients. 
    14. Be a polite human.
    15. Reply to every tweet!
    16. Don’t forget where you came from. 
    17. Share your YouTube videos.
    18. Use Twitter for Business Development.
    19. Give people credit.
    20. Use the native app.
    21. Be consistent. 
    22. Follow people in your industry.
    23. Follow people in your city.
    24. Spend a minimum of 5 minutes in your home feed.
    25. Log in with intent. 
    26. Look at your analytics.
    27. Cycle your content. 
    28. Don’t use the retweet button.
    29. Be Patient!
    30. Twitter Marketing is a long game!
  • The X Platform (Twitter) Management Tools – Here Are My 11 Tools

    Updated 2/1/2025

    What tools are best for X (Twitter) management? The short answer is X Twitter. Most people don’t like when I say that, though.

    Of course, it depends on what you want to achieve and how much money you want to waste — er — spend. With most social media platforms, the native app is the best way to manage it. Their algorithm prefers it. And, if you want to read my long post on X (Twitter) Management, it’s on this site.

    How Many Apps Do You Want?

    I don’t want to go back and forth doing this and that and the other. Do you? If you automate, then you are at risk for set-it-and-forget-it. This could be bad. I’ve seen it go bad. The same goes for auto cross posting from platform to platform.

    If you’re not checking the notifications on a platform, why even be on it? It’s like having a monologue at a party. Pretty soon, people will leave your presence. No one likes that one guy who won’t shut up about himself.

    What is Your Budget?

    Many agencies prefer to use a tool that is a dashboard for all of their social media profiles and engagement. These software platforms come with features that will cost you a pretty penny.

    I have peers who swear by Sprout Social. That’s going to set you back between $100 and $250 a month. If it provides what your social media agency needs then go for it. If it’s just for your small business, it’d be better to hire someone.

    I used to use Buffer to schedule tweets for clients. I started using it for myself again when Hootsuite went from $75(ish) to $250.

    In the past, I used Timely which changed to Minideck and both of which have been sundowned. Buffer will set you back $0 – $100 a month. That’s a fairly affordable option. The thing with Buffer is, that it needs to be filled. So, tweets still have to be curated. It’s not really helping you manage much. You can’t reply. You can’t look at lists.

    Agoura Pulse will cost you a pretty penny — up to $400 a month. It allows you to assign tweets to a team member to respond to, have tweets approved, and allows you to reply. Sure, Dove uses it. But they sell more soap than you do, right?

    My X Management Tools

    1. X.com

    When people ask what I tool I use to manage X, they’re often surprised that I say X.com. (Also, I am having a hard time getting used to saying “X” instead of “Twitter.”) This is where you create lists, set up your profile, follow and search for people. (I miss their analytics. When are they going to bring it back?) The mobile app has some of those abilities but not all.

    I use X.com to participate in Twitter chats, too. Carol Stephen hosts a Twitter chat every Tuesday called #DigiBlogChat and her toolbelt is listed in her article.

    I only get emails when someone sends me a DM and only for my account. Push notifications on social platforms are dangerous for your productivity. Use time blocking instead.

    2. X Mobile App

    Download the X (Twitter) mobile app so you can post on the go — or just not at your desk. Social media management isn’t a 9-5 job. I check my notifications from about 7:00 AM until 10:00 PM.

    As an aside, I strongly recommend against allowing push notifications. Fit X management into your life, don’t let it interrupt yours.

    3. X (Twitter) Lists

    The most under-utilized feature of X (Twitter) is lists. If you want to focus your attention on certain segments that you follow, Lists is priority number one. Make the top 3 lists (customers, vendors, leaders) columns on Hootsuite (if you pay for it) and you’re 85% there.

    Before Hootsuite became $250/month, Twitter plus Hootsuite were my two tools if I were stranded on a deserted island with high-speed WiFi and Diet Coke. If I get to a point where I manage that many X accounts again, I’ll go back to Hootsuite in a heartbeat. AI put a huge dent into my business. But that’s another topic.

    4. X (Twitter) Analytics

    Twitter’s analytics ware so awesome back in the day — they used to have demographic data. But that’s the thing with privacy. It’s good for users, bad for marketers. They were unavailable from October 2023 but it looks like they’re back now as “Account Analytics.” See screenshots below from 2/1/25. (This is a good reason to update older posts.)

    You have to turn them on and I’m going to guess it’s because I’m paying for my account. I pair this with a Google Sheet to track the five main metrics of tweets, impressions, profile visits, mentions and followers.

    image 1
    image 2
    image 3

    I used to like the tweets to profile visit ratio as the best metric ( above .20.). The profile visits is important because it means that a user saw your tweet, clicked on your username/handle, and then looked at your profile.

    5. Hootsuite Pro ($$$)

    When I was rocking and rolling managing 10+ Twitter accounts, Hootsuite was my “X management tool” of choice. I put that in quotes because there is no one tool that does everything I need or want. If there was one tool that actually helps you manage, it’s Hootsuite. I pay for Pro because I manage more than 3 accounts.

    Hootsuite Pro will set you back $249 a month. It is worth every penny if you have that many accounts. Every. Red. Cent.

    Some people like TweetDeck but I haven’t liked them since Twitter purchased them. One of the bonuses about Hootsuite is that the mobile app has the same organization as the web app. This is key to making use of lists as well as hashtag or domain searches.

    6. Google Sheets for X

    I use Google Sheets for two reasons: 1) basic reporting; and 2) content curation for my Basic and Pro X (Twitter) plans. Also, sometimes a platform can lose data. Don’t just rely on them. Have a backup. People who care about metrics can read spreadsheets.

    screenshot of google sheet of my analtyics
    I aggregate the values from Twitter’s analytics in a Google Sheet.

    7. Who.Unfollowed.Me

    Who.Unfollowed.Me is now Fedica. Until X removes the requirement to have a 1:1 following:follower ratio to grow your account beyond 2,000, 5,000, 9,000, 14,000, and 19,000 followers, I have to unfollow accounts who don’t follow back. This is why I like who.unfollowed.me. If you have people listed, you can still pay attention to them in your Hootsuite columns.

    It’s pretty rude to build your brand on the back of followers and then dump them so that your vanity shows you have 20,000 followers and you follow 47. If that’s the message you want to send your followers, just buy a bunch of spam people. It’s social media. Don’t be a jerk.

    This is a good place to plug my book: Keys to Being Social. It focuses on the behavior that makes you successful online.
    The platforms change and evolve but the behavior doesn’t.
    It’s $10. You’ll thank me later.

    8. Revive Old Post Pro ($$$)

    Revive Old Post is a WordPress plugin that is free and has a paid version. Because X decided to charge more for software to use their API, this became more expensive ($200/yr as of 2/1/25) the same way Hootsuite did.

    I only used this for my own business. This is something that is nice-to-have. I don’t currently have the client work to support it. As soon as I do, I’m buying it again. My favorite part is the post-variations. Also, you can use it to post to your Google Business Profile. That was really handy.

    I recommend it for clients who want to ensure their blog posts are being cycled on X. I don’t recommend using it for other platforms as the culture on those platforms does not support repetition.

    My settings are somewhere between 7.5 and 37.5 hours. I like odd numbers so that it’s not tweeting at the exact same time — every time. You’ll get in the data rut that your best time to tweet is at 4:00 PM on Thursday. It’s because you only tweet at 4:00 PM on Thursday.

    9. Google Analytics for X

    You should always look at your website’s Google Analytics to see how much traffic is coming from X and what the time on site is. When I start a new client, my promise is 10% lift in overall website traffic each quarter.

    As a social media manager, I rarely have access to a client’s GA. If you do, try to get time (what used to be called) on-site at 2 minutes or more. It means people are reading.

    In GA4, it would be in Pages and Screens: Average Engagement Time Per User. I’ll include a screenshot of my analytics. I didn’t work my business very much in 2024 as I had to take a full-time position at TJ Maxx to supplement my income. But it shows you where to look. (2025 is going to be my year!)

    image 4

    Also, I wouldn’t worry about the bounce rate too much. If you answered the question for the reader, there is no reason for them to stay.

    Remember that t.co is still the link shortener for X. So if you see that as a referral source, it’s coming from X (Twitter). I say this because I once had a client who didn’t know that and thought no one was clicking on links from X.

    So much about your audience can be learned from Google analytics; I wrote about that.

    screenshot of Google Analytics for this site
    My time on site is low for Twitter because I am only posting every 37.5 hours right now. If I posted more, it would go up. I also haven’t published in 4 weeks.

    10. Bitly Chrome Extension

    I am a huge fan of bit.ly and shortened links in general in tweets. This makes it much easier for people to retweet with the copy / paste method and looks much better.

    The combination of bitly.com and the Chrome Extension is a must for X management.

    11. The Reply Button

    I talk about the reply button a lot. So many people (I blame COVID) simply respond to comments they get on their own posts. Which is the baseline of polite behavior.

    But to do real outreach and growth, you should comment on other people’s posts. Do it on X, Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, Reddit, etc. This opens you up to another audience. You can have complete, productive, inspiring conversations with other people on a thread you don’t own. It’s just like walking up to a group of people at a networking event. You didn’t start the conversation, but that doesn’t mean you won’t get something out of it.

    Now Defunct Twitter Card Validator (Used to be Tool #4)

    Twitter’s Card Validator is sadly defunct. I really loved how it ensured a post pulled up the right image when using a link to your website. In fact, (Meta) Facebook’s Sharing Debugger doesn’t seem to work to refresh Open Graph images either.

    image

    X Management Tools Wrapped Up

    X management isn’t for the faint of heart. You need to have tools that actually help you achieve your goals. It’s important to be a practitioner; stay on X as much as possible. This allows you to see any UI/UX and feature changes that a platform implements. That affects your tactics.

    For example, Twitter added scheduling just to the dot com site back in the day. That’s pretty amazing. You can also use GIFs when you’re on Twitter native.

    Try not to rely on too many tools outside of the native platform. You’ll become so distant that you are at risk of being out of touch and tone deaf.

  • Google Ads Alone Won’t Save Your Business

    Quite a few referrals have come my way over the years. I have one thing to say about pay-per-click (PPC) ads. Are you ready? Ads alone won’t save your business. If that is your goal, you will be throwing away money.

    “Don’t simply wish for results to show up; know what your looking for specifically and how the strategy your company has come up with is helping you achieve those goals in a way which is both realistic and relatively speedy.” Mitch Britt

    Organic social media with a killer website and PPC is a great combination. It’s marketing love. In other words, PPC done right is in concert with a wholistic marking plan.

    What is Organic Social Media?

    Social media is a way to post online. Organic social media is the combined efforts of your organization through various platforms (media) to build relationships (social) that will lead back to your website (findability). When you start paying for posts to be boosted or buying clicks, you’re in the world of advertising.

    What is Pay Per Click (PPC)?

    Pay Per Click is the art of creating campaigns and landing pages in order to be seen by a particular audience. There are generally several campaigns and keywords being bid upon during this practice.

    “Pay-per-click (PPC) is an advertising model that lets marketers place ads on an ad platform and pay the host of that platform every time their ad is clicked.” Search Engine Journal

    Steve Bastien is one of my favorite people to have worked with during my time at Thought House. As an agency specializing in franchise development, we would create the website, write persuasive copy, and create landing pages. As we shared these pages on social media, we would look at what worked and what didn’t. Those high-performing organic campaigns, more often than not, became PPC campaigns.

    Of course, my partner Warren Laine-Naida offers both Search Engine Advertising (SEA) for small businesses. In combination with your organic social media efforts, this is an excellent use of your Google ad budget.

    “Taking advantage of all the opportunities you have to measure and improve your online marketing is the key to success. Google search is the gold standard for learning in real-time, and Google Ads is a great way to get on board.” Warren Laine-Naida

    If you can, it is always best to think of every part of your marketing plan from the website to the people at the other end of the lead generation email.

    Isn’t PPC just SEO?

    In one word: no. PPC is not SEO. SEO is an acronym for search engine optimization. I like to call it “findability.” Meaning, SEO is a comprehensive strategy combining the technical structure of your website, the quality of your website’s content, and social signals.

    “SEO stands for Search Engine Optimization, which is the practice of increasing the quantity and quality of traffic to your website through organic search engine results.” Moz.com 

    Granted, I’m not a technical SEO professional. If you’re looking for that, contact my friend Pam Aungst’s agency.

    Views, Clicks, and Impressions

    An impression means the number of potential people who saw the thing. Think about billboards. Clear Channel sells these to this day. The rates are based upon how many eyes will potentially see them. Impressions are important in brand awareness campaigns.

    A click is an action taken by a viewer. They viewed the website, video, or went to the app you’re selling.

    A conversion is what happens after the person comes to your website. It can be a sale, joining a email list, a completed form, or a download. Your advertising agency should set up conversions for you in Google Analytics.

    Data, Data, Data!

    We’re all obsessed with data these days. Me? Not so much. Why? Because data only tells you what you measure. Read this again: data only tells you what you measure. It is impossible to measure everything.

    Data is a snapshot of the past. It can’t predict the future. The data you do have is only helpful if you actually look at it and change your behavior. Confirmation bias and pride are generally deterrents to change.

    I’ll never forget a client who insisted that the website didn’t work since all of their leads came via telephone.

    “How did they find your number? Oh yeah. The website.”

    These are the things that make me shake my head. It’s so important to ask where your leads came from. But that’s another blog post. You can watch me talk about it in this video.

    Getting the Customer to Convert

    You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink. Also, if your social media manager leads the horse to the “water” and the trough is empty, whose fault is that? Right. Not the SMM.

    This is where a holistic marketing strategy is important. Hiring an agency that has professionals or gathering vendors and coordinating them is important to the effectiveness of your marketing.

    Often, the business owner needs to focus their efforts. Founders tend to be idea people. Marketers execute on ideas. With that said, we still need participation from the business itself.

    Get a Consultation

    If your business doesn’t have a solid plan, let’s schedule a paid consultation with me. My partner Warren Laine-Naida and I include ads in one of our Small Business Packages. Why? Because without the right organic strategy, your ad dollars will be wasted.

    But you can also hire another advertising agency. Educate yourself. Empower yourself. This is the key to hiring better vendors and making great marketing decisions for your business.

    Remember, social media and advertising are long-term solutions. If short-term is your last hope, you may want to try something else.

  • What Do You Get From a Marketing Consult?

    Consultants have gotten a bad wrap in the media for years. I still remember watching the movie Office Space and laughing so hard at the consultants as they re-interviewed current employees for their jobs. This scene is awesome. But I digress.

    What Is A Marketing Consult?

    A marketing consultation or consult is where you hire a marketing professional for a conversation to gain their insight.

    Marketing consults can be either phone or video calls, depending upon the consultant. The goal of a marketing consult or consultation is to unblock you. A good consultant should ask a lot of questions to help clarify your goals and help create a plan to go forward. If your marketing consultation doesn’t feel a little bit like therapy, it’s not the right person for you.

    Most of my consulting clients take their own notes and leave with homework. Often they schedule a follow-up call.

    How Does A Marketing Consultant Charge?

    Though I charge for the hour, I do not pro-rate the time. Meaning, the advice and insight given during a consultation comes from my considerable and diverse experience. The value is in the advice, even if it’s given in the last five minutes of the call.

    Because I genuinely care for my clients, I often send them follow-up tools, materials, or referrals as it comes to mind. There’s no extra charge for kindness, right?

    How Much Should Marketing Consultation Cost?

    You can pay anywhere from $1.00/min to $16.67/min on Clarity.

    The better question is what type of value and growth will happen once you execute the advice? The advice is awesome but you still have to do the work.

    How much is investing in your own business worth?

    Will your business make $1,000 more a month?

    How much is that worth to you?

    Do You Need a Marketing Consult?

    It depends. Do you want advice? Are you stuck? If you don’t have time to follow up on the advice, maybe it’s not a good time. Like therapy, sometimes the act of talking to a professional brings the clarity you desire.

    I’ve advised my clients on a variety of topics including:

    • Pricing
    • Job Costing
    • Time Blocking
    • Auditing Website Copy
    • Audience Insight
    • Blogging Topics
    • How to Reach Your Audience
    • Email Marketing Strategy
    • Social Media Marketing Strategy
    • Opposition Research

    Reviews of Bridget’s Marketing Consultations

    “…we ended our conversion with us both laughing after I said ‘I need more monitors for more chrome tabs…’ It was a great call. If you haven’t talked with her yet, you really should line up a call!” Malcolm Peralty

    Great chatting with [Bridget] today about marketing my plugins! Now I need to get after my homework.” Kathy Darling

    “An hour of talking can make an impact! We have booked an hour-long video call with Bridget and it was totally worth it. She was able to quickly define our main problem and fears associate with it. In addition, tips and tactics on where to start and how to move forward were shared during the meeting. Before the meeting, I had small doubts that an hour is even enough to cover the intro part of the problems, but it was very productive.” Raitis Sevelis

  • Your Business Marketing Should (Still) Include The X Platform (Twitter)

    Yes, your business marketing strategy should include X (formerly known as Twitter). It’s one piece, albeit a large one, of any successful branding campaign. If I’ve said it once, I’ve tweeted about it ten times.

    I may have even written an article or two. Okay, maybe more than two.

    Twitter is the best platform for B2B marketing. It serves several marketing purposes including brand awareness, public relations, listening, content curation, and relationship building.

    Twitter/ Is Relevant

    Twitter has been around for over ten years; I’ve personally been using it for business to business marketing since 2009. It’s not going away. Don’t allow the pop culture or political atmosphere blind you to Twitter’s relevance in any good marketing plan.

    Yes, X is still super relevant in 2025.

    Google Indexes Tweets/Posts from X

    It’s true that Google indexes tweets. It’s an excellent way to help with brand awareness and even to rebuild your brand.

    “If you want to displace negative content or build a strong brand identity, Twitter can help, says Contributor Chris Silver Smith.” Search Engine Land (2018)

    If you would like to test it out, perform your own search. Do it in private or incognito mode. Google someone’s name or your own if your account is active.

    Though there is quite a bit of fluctuation at how tweets affect SEO in general, I believe it is helpful. Google has increasingly changed their math to favor what is helpful to the person searching. If the results of that math, prove Twitter is a good result, then your tweets will be shown.

    “Study finds that percentage of tweets indexed by Google increases in proportion to the tweeter’s follower count.” Stone Temple (2018)

    Twitter/X Distributes Content

    Whether you are microblogging on Twitter or publishing articles on your website (best practice), you are creating content. Creating content makes you an author, elevates you as an expert, and helps you find and cultivate an audience.

    People use Twitter to read and to discover information. Customers will use it to validate you the same way people use Yelp or TripAdvisor.

    What should be included in a healthy marketing strategy?

    Though this section should be an article on its own, I will say that any healthy business to business marketing plan should include the following — in order of importance:

    • Website
    • Twitter
    • Facebook Page
    • LinkedIn
    • Instagram*

    *if you have the time. Instagram takes more work because of the original content that is required. Also, it’s not designed for a sell, it barely works for soft sales. Though, I will admit I’ve bought consumer goods, for B2B it’s about relationships.

    Time and money is a factor in starting and maintaining these pieces of your marketing puzzle, but you should be investing in your own business. Many suggest 15% of your revenue should go to marketing.

    That said, if you don’t have a website, you can hire one of my friends.

    Need help with Twitter/X?

    I have a YouTube Twitter/X Course — though somewhat dated now that it’s X instead of Twitter.

    I can also train you myself or you can outsource to me. It’s up to you. I strongly recommend taking Twitter seriously for your business.