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  • How to Make Your Tweets More Useful

    supr

    One of the major push backs I get surrounding twitter use for business involves the idea of ROI. It’s a genuine concern and something that can feel very hard to measure for most businesses. It’s rare when someone can effectively attract followers and blatantly sell something to that at the same time. In most social media settings it just doesn’t work that way. The objective is to simply create enough engagement that people want to find out more on their own. While that’s a great long term objective, it can be a little hard to track.

    One of the approaches I preach is to think about you tweeting activities, and subsequent payoffs, in an expanded way. Sure, you want to get more business, but I find that getting better ideas, testing messages and doing all manner of research with my tweets provides tangible ROI for my business as well. A large percentage of my tweets are positioned to intentionally test ideas and trends for use in other ways. I’m still providing engaging information, but in a strategic way – that’s how you need to think about your activity in any social media setting to get immediate and long term ROI.

    The key to making your tweets more useful in this fashion is to employ one of the many twitter metrics tools cropping up daily. These tools allow you to understand how the twitterverse is reacting to your tweets. Basically they are link tracking tools that shorten links and give you a dashboard report on clicks and retweets and the like for each of your tweets. Having this kind of data allows me to do a few things of interest.

    • Let’s say I find a site I think is cool and tweet it. From my dashboard I can see lots of folks jumped on that and passed it around and also thought it was cool. Bingo! – I’ve got a topic for an expanded blog post.
    • Let’s say I write a blog post and point it out on twitter – I can get real-time feedback, over and above comments, on how hot the topic was
    • Let’s say I propose a question to my followers or make a strong statement about a marketing tactic. Again, back to my stats I see the entire conversation that surrounded my topic (or not) and I may have a new theory on how to talk about a marketing tactic
    • Let’s say I point out several articles I stumble across as good reads and for whatever reason one of the article ignites a storm of reaction – well, maybe I need to look deeper into that topic.
    • Let’s say people seem to pass on stuff more rabidly during a certain time of day – maybe I should take note of that
    • Let’s say people seem to like certain types of tweets, judeging by how they interact, than others – could that help me tweet better?

    Do you see how, by getting a few details about the ways people, even with small numbers of followers, are reacting to your tweets you could use this data to inform how you tweet and how you might get immediate bang for your buck over and above the obvious long term goal of leads and sales?

    Here are a few of the tracking tools you might consider. Most are really twitter toolboxes as they make it easy to tweet with multiple twitter account management, bookmarklets, link shorteners, and built in search functions.

    • HootSuite – very stable tool, I see traces of it’s owly link everywhere on twitter
    • CoTweet – positioned very well as the enterprise twitter toolbox
    • SU.PR – the creation the folks at StumbleUpon and Four Hour Workweek author Tim Ferris this combines some extra features to promote your tweets on Stumble Upon – in a rolling beta release right now, but I sure like this one.
    • Objective Marketer – another one in private beta, but looks very robust.
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    Posted by: John Jantsch on Jul 16, 09 | 7:07 am
    Category: Marketing Strategy, Social Media | Tags: , , , , , ,

    Comments
    • guyblaskey
      Great post - The tip on using hootsuite could be priceless.

      Thanks,
      twitter.com/poochandmutt
    • Great explanation for businesses who get hung up on "standard" ROI related to sales. ROI considerations, especially within the realm of social media, need to be expanded. Great ideas in the post :-) (PS, I'm loving Objective Marketer and SU.PR too)
    • A lot of same considerations apply to email direct marketing. People will eventually tune out emails if all they have is promotional "sales" content. One of the advantages email has is that it can be a very personal communication medium, at least when used by a smaller business with a "neighborly" reputation.

      For this reason I always strongly recommend for all email marketing efforts to provide something more than "sale item of the day". Find other kinds of content customers will find useful or interesting, and if appropriate for your type of business write in an informal person-to-person style. This fits much more with people's expectations about "social media".
    • amydyslex
      nice pack of tools...thanks for sharing
    • I love the Hootlet button for your tool bar- you can run all your twitter accounts there. So as your reading your RSS feeds and find interesting articles to send out you can set them up over the course of the whole day or even longer. I try to set up the tweets for a large portion of the day in just 20-30 mins in the morning. Also you get a top bar frame that goes with it that rebrands you as people are reading it.They can RT from there and also share it in a multitude of ways.
      Have not used the last 2 you posted but will check them out - thanks for the great post.....
    • This is good - any kind of tool that gives you more visibility and measurement for your tweeting is good. Do you have any security concerns for any of these tools, John? Some ask you to provide your twitter login details...
    • sherrell
      Such great information and resources. Thanks for this wonderful post!
    • John - I like your point on the need of engaging your audience, but in a strategic way. I believe, that is at the core of any business communication, on any channel. I tried to explain the same in my blog "On Twitter, Experiment with a Strategy" - http://om.ly/?ujD

      And, of course! Thank you for the mention of ObjectiveMarketer. We are growing fast to be known as the most comprehensive marketing software for Social Media Channels.

      We are dedicated to help marketers adopt social media as an extension or rather as a preferred channel for marketing, providing an easy yet sophisticated marketing platform.
    • Good post. I like that you're talking about ROI - and I really like the focus on using strategy in our social media efforts. I'm a big fan of Hoot Suite - use it daily.
    • mattwalde
      Great post - It's funny how many people immediately ask how I measure the roi from my twitter posts... Answer: I don't. It takes mere seconds to make a post, if I get incremental website visits out of it, bonus.

      Matt

      www.advisionmarketing.com/blog

      http://twitter.com/adVisionMktg
    • We have been using Hootsuite since 2008. It has really helped us monitor accounts for our clients.
      http://www.endagoninnovations.com
    • Thank you for the info! I think too many companies, and my company in particular, are ignoring the possibilities social media could bring. I teach English at Berlitz, and I am trying to score myself a social media position with the company. I'll use this info while trying to sell my idea. Thanks again. - Ryan
    • This will be very useful in the coming weeks, I joined Twitter.com on Bastille Day (Tuesday, July 14), and proceeded directly into the 21st century!
      I noticed the reblog button and wanted to do it, but am looking for more information on how that works. Does that just let me (easily) post your article at my blog? Started http://bluegolfusa.blogspot.com last weekend, so am new to blogging.
      Great post, keep them coming!
    • These are some great twitter tools. Thanks for sharing.
    • defintely a great article. i'll check out some of those tracking tools to see if we can things rollling a bit as well.
    • I have been using twitter for a while. Thanks for the info
    • I am new to this. I just started a business. Thank you for the help you offer people like me
    • This is a great post. It drives me crazy when people start talking about wanting to see an immediate ROI for their time "social networking" - Hello! 1) The same principles apply in social networking as they do regular networking. You have to show up consistantly, engage and interact, and build relationships. Yes, some may buy right away, but most want to get to know you first. 2) Twitter and Facebook aren't platforms for selling! That will turn people off really fast! They are platforms for sharing, learning, and connecting. I think too many business owners give up on social networking simply because they are too focused on the short term ROI to see the see the long-term value.
    • Hi John,

      I work for the company that created HootSuite and I just wanted to say: excellent article! We're always glad to hear the many ways HootSuite is helping businesses tweet better. Thank you to all those that commented as well and @StevenMoore, we love the Hootlet button too! Sharing is caring, after all.

      Thank you again and best wishes,

      Kirsten & the HootSuite team
    • johannadundas
      Thanks for the great info!
    blog comments powered by Disqus


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