Tag: Twitter

  • Curate Content by Curating People

    How do you curate content to share online? You do it by curating people. Be a people broker.
    Is your Twitter feed worth reading by you?

    Would you like your own Facebook Page?

    Let me tell you a story.

    Let’s go back to the summer of 2004 when my sister and her friends came to visit me here in Southern California. They were curious about the Southern California lifestyle.

    “Where do you want to eat?”

    “Anywhere but a chain,” they said.

    Now, there’s nothing wrong with the Cheesecake Factory or Pizza Hut, but they’re the same here as they are in Northern California, that’s the point of a chain. They wanted local flavor.

    “What about Wahoo’s?” I asked. “It’s a local chain.”

    That phrase “local chain” got them curious. So we went to Wahoo’s who started here in Orange County in 1988 and they loved it. They had a great meal and got to experience part of Orange County’s local culture.

    Fringe Players

    Chris Brogan, in a Women in Business Today video said:

    “All of the experts… we all see it all. … If …300,000 people are tweeting Mashable. Who cares? You know what? Go find interesting fringe players that no one’s ever heard of and treat them like they’re the experts. You’ll have more fun.”

    Curation Tools

    Now, I’ve talked about being a people curator before, so if you’ve followed quality people, why not use that to your benefit?

    You don’t need a third party tool to tell you what to tweet. You’re better than just another account that tweets Mashable, BuzzFeed, or TechCrunch.

    Don’t get me wrong, you’ll see Gary Vaynerchuk, Ted Rubin, Mashable, and other well-known people in my tweets. But you’ll also read from Carol Stephen, Ruby Rusine, and Amy Donohue.

    I’ve found some of my own gems, “local flavor,” or “fringe players” as Chris Brogan calls them. They’re on my “Social Friends” list on Twitter. I know, if I want reliable content to share, I can go right there. I don’t need some fancy tool to curate content other than my own Twitter lists.

    Win-Win-Win

    When you curate people and share their content, it shows that you’re a social person. It shows that you reciprocate. It helps promote your new connections. Your audience benefits from another perspective and a local flavor.

    That’s a win — times three.

    Content curation is as simple as curating people.

  • Do I want Facebook or The X Platform (Twitter) for my Business?

    It’s a tug of war of sorts.

    Facebook copies Twitter. Twitter copies Facebook. This goes on and on. Call it competition, tug of war, or innovation. Regardless, it’s good for the consumer.

    Who has the bigger audience? Who has the most spam? Who’s trying to pry into your personal details?

    So, I’m a business, which should I use?

    I’m always amazed at this question. Why not both?

    But if you really have to choose, ask yourself this:

    • What do you want to achieve?
    • Who do you want to reach?
    • Do you want to build up one and then the other?
    • Can you devote the time to doing them both simultaneously?
    *Disclaimer 1: Twitter and Facebook could change any of what I’m about to point out at any time. This post was written on August 19, 2014.
    *Disclaimer 2: It’s hard for me to be objective. Everyone who knows me knows I favor Twitter and my own numbers support that. This is my best effort to present objective pros and cons.

    Below I compare Twitter and Facebook by feature. I apologize for the length, but every business has different needs, people who will be using the platform, and how (mobile or desktop) they will use it. You’ll need to consider them all to choose.

    First Things First

    Facebook and Twitter have entirely different cultures and different rules, protocols, or expectations.

    Respect each platform for its own benefits, audience, and culture. I beg you not to connect the two so that you Tweet to Facebook or Tweet from Facebook. Just because something is easy, doesn’t mean it’s good.

    You will be judged for being lazy, disregarding either audience, and people will wonder if you’ll ever respond. (Ya, I said it.)

    Read: “Social Media: Different Platform, Different Language” by Carol Stephen

    Audience Size

    According to Facebook, they have “829 million daily active users on average in June 2014.” That’ too large of an audience to ignore this platform. A lot of people have recently said it’s not worth posting on Facebook anymore. I disagree.

    Twitter has 271 million active users.

    They both have massive, growing audiences. This won’t change. They haven’t jumped the shark or lost out like Myspace. (more…)

  • Are you in a Twitter rut? Stop Digging.

    “They” say that if you’re in a rut, stop digging.

    Are you talking to the same people over and over and over again?

    Do you only spend time on Twitter in your “mentions” column?

    We all have days where we’re trying to just get by and, believe me, I’m the one who says you can maintain your account in five minutes a day, but that’s not going to help you grow.

    Whenever I start to feel like I’m in a rut, I am reminded of this Tweet from Scott Stratten:

    If Twitter is about relationships, then it logically follows that relationships take work. That does take time.

    (more…)

  • Ten Ways to Be Retweetable

    If You Want to be Retweeted, Be Retweet-able

    It never ceases to amaze me how technology cripples our ability to communicate.

    (Wait. What?)

    Yes, you would think it should be the opposite.

    This post lists ways to remind you that you are still a human being even when you have a computer in your pocket.

    1. Stop Tweeting from Facebook

    Yes. Automation. Specifically, “Tweeting from Facebook” is very easy and popular. But is it the best way to get your message out on Twitter? I say no.

    (Save your outcry for politicians or the comment section.)

    Listen, I’ve been tweeting since 2007. I’ve seen a lot of new people take up Twitter lately, thinking it will give them instant results like the promise of Sea Monkeys on the back of cereal boxes.

    You don’t build relationships by pushing buttons.

    I always tell people, just because you “can” doesn’t mean you “should.”

    I see a lot of tweets from Facebook. They often lack context, relevance, or even text (yes, when you post a photo on Facebook it “tweets” a link – just a link).

    However, if your tweet is a fragment of a long, run-on sentence which, out of context, makes no sense, then people will ignore it in their feed.

    Not only that, but when on my mobile device, why should I have to go to Facebook to see your photo? Or go through Facebook just to go to the original link?

    The biggest argument I encounter to this advice is “I don’t have time.”

    It takes all of forty seconds to copy the text and paste it into Twitter. It might take a minute to upload a photo to Twitter. You’ll have to edit the tweet, too. But you do have time.

    You don’t book U2 for a coffee house; consider the fact that certain venues are appropriate for different styles of communication.

    Also, it looks like you don’t know what you’re doing. (Yes, I said it.)

    Even Carol Stephen, the nicest lady on the internet, said,

    “One post across all platforms seems lazy.”

    I realize your feelings are hurt, but is this what you want people to think about you and your personal or business brand? The best-case scenario is that people just think you are lazy. I’d say the advice is more important than your feelings.

    Yes, it is possible to manage your Twitter account with a minimum of five minutes a day. If you don’t have a lot of followers (10,000), this is achievable.

    2. Tweet more than once a day.

    Do you really think people are going to actually go to your Twitter profile every day? I hate to disappoint you, but they will not. Do you?

    They might go check out your profile when they decide to follow you. Otherwise, they will, most likely, never see it again. Make sure it’s compelling enough that people will follow you.

    (See: Baby Steps to the Tweet)

    3. Use Hashtags.

    Politicians can use their office as a hashtag, businesses can use their industries, people can use their hobbies, etc. This is a great way to find like-minded people.

    Don’t go hog-wild. Three hashtags per tweet (max) is a good rule of thumb. Otherwise, you not only look like spam, but your tweet is difficult to read.

    Set up a search for that hashtag and use a column-format platform to take advantage of this like Hootsuite or Tweetdeck. (This is also good for the lists you make, but that’s another blog post.)

    (See: What is a Hashtag?)

    4. Thank the people that retweet you.

    What a concept. Sure, it takes work to do this. Don’t retweet their retweet. Just reply to them and say “Thank you.”

    Expressions of gratitude are how people will become endeared to you. Don’t you like to be thanked?

    5. Retweet other people.

    Yes, it’s social media and reciprocation is part of the unspoken rules of anything social whether it’s online or in person. Think about it for a moment.

    If you’re a pastor, retweet other pastors.

    If you’re a business, (follow and) retweet similar industries, even competitors.

    If you’re a politician, (follow and) retweet other politicians that are tweeting. (Specific advice – click here.)

    The retweet can include a reply like this:

    Bottom line:

    Regardless of your industry, brand, or organization: show some support to your peers. My friend Amy Donohue always says: “It is called social media for a reason, people.”

    6. Make the tweet 120 characters or less.

    Yes, some of us still “old school retweet.” It’s a good way to reply with context. Admittedly, this is highly debated. (@UnMarketing, for example, prefers replies.)

    I like to mix up replies and retweets. However, there are stats out there that the shorter the tweet, the more likely people will engage.

    Do some of your own experimenting.

    (See: Marketing Week “Keep tweets short to boost engagement”)

    7. Content is king.

    Content matters. You have it, you probably just don’t realize it yet.

    (See: “Content, Just Elbow Your Way In“)

    8. Grammar Matters

    Whether it’s the text of the tweet or the blog you’re posting grammar matters. If you want to be seen as a professional, you have to be professional.

    If you can’t remember the difference between homophones, for example, either put a sticky note by your computer or avoid the expression. For example, instead of typing, “You’re welcome,” you can say “sure thing” or “no problem” or “anytime.”

    (See” Copyblogger’s 15 Grammatical Errors That Make You Look Silly and 10 Grammar Mistakes that Can Keep Your Content from Spreading)

    If, however, I feel that the tweet is too good to pass up, I will correct the grammar before retweeting. This is another reason why I prefer old-school RT’s over the “retweet button.”

    9. End the Mindless Repetition

    Okay, you understand that no one on the face of this planet has bookmarked your Twitter page and so you want to get your message out. That’s good. But it can’t be the only thing you tweet. Think about it for a moment.

    Go sign into Twitter, not a third-party app, Twitter.com. Look at your profile. Would you honestly follow yourself? That’s a good indicator of how you should modify your Tweeting behavior.

    10. Shorten Your Links

    Bitly.com shortens links as does Hootsuite.com.

    With this, I add the advice to check your links (to make sure they work) before tweeting. This is especially important when recycling tweets.

    Challenge:

    As with most of my advice, it comes from the perspective of a user and enthusiast. You can check out my “street cred” and decide for yourself.

    I double-dog dare you to change your tweeting habits for one or two weeks. I believe the proof of the pudding is the eating.

    (My favorite tool to see popular retweets is Crowdbooster.)