This document provides an overview of how to use Twitter effectively for business purposes without annoying non-users. It discusses growing marketing exposure, sales, and customer loyalty through Twitter. It then covers Twitter basics and terminology. It provides tips for personal branding on Twitter, including building an account, bio, and determining who will tweet. It outlines specific weekly strategies for using Twitter to make connections, direct traffic, hire people, get feedback, be helpful and answer questions. It also discusses tools to help with monitoring, scheduling, and optimizing tweets.
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Kimbles tweet sheet
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2. Kimble’s TweetSheet
HOW TO USE TWITTER FOR BUSINESS
WITHOUT ANNOYING THOSE WHO DON’T
13 lessons over 13 weeks that can transform how companies use
Twitter to
•Grow their marketing exposure
•Increase their sales
•Solidify their customer loyalty
Reward and Incentive Programs
3. Where are You in Your Twitter Evolution?
• “I don’t have a Twitter account”
• “I have a Twitter account” (sure, I JUST set it
up cause I knew I would need one for this
class…but I have one)
• “Twitter is a stupid application – no business
gets done there.”
• “I use Twitter for business and have seen a
direct increase in sales as a result”
4. What makes Kimble Qualified to Teach
This?
“This twitter stuff rocks – it accounted for 12.4% of
Proforma’s sales in 2010 and we have 7 new customers as
a direct result of Twitter efforts.”
…and that’s just the stuff we can measure!
5. The Twitter Basics
Twitter is a microblogging platform which allows you to publish short messages of mess than
140 characters using different mediums like IM, cellphones and the web. 1
It’s social elements: You can befriend and monitor each other’s messages and updates.
The experience: a fragmented experience of opinions, events, news, ideas, feedback.
Ambient Intimacy: being able to keep in touch with people with a level of regularity and
intimacy that you wouldn’t usually have access to, because time and space conspire to make
it impossible.
Who cares? Who wants this level of detail ? Isn’t this all just annoying noise? …There are
many people who find great value in the ongoing noise. It helps them get to know people
who would otherwise just be acquaintances.
It makes them feel closer to people they care for but in whose lives they’re not able to
participate as closely as they’d like. Knowing these details creates intimacy.
12)Twitter
13)Ambient intimacy: http://www.disambiguity.com/ambient-intimacy
6. What Twitter Can Do for Your Business*
• Drive a flood of new people to your website or blog or offline business
• Sell lots more product than you ever imagined (Dell made $2million in 12 months, purely from
Twitter offers)
• Spy on what’s going on in your industry – see what’s hot and what’s not
• Listen to what people really think about your business or product (or you!)
• Provide instant customer service, wow your customers and nip problems in the bud fast
• Take the pulse of your prospects and customers, find out what they want
• Discover new opportunities –find people searching for what you offer
• Get the attention of the media and attract free publicity
• Spice up the attendance and the atmosphere at your events
• Build your brand and reputation as a caring corporate citizen or as a thought leader and
innovator
• Find suppliers, contractors and staff – worldwide
• Announce your real estate or auction listings quickly
• Stay instantly in touch with your company team or special interest group
• Provide help and news in times of crisis
• Reap the benefits of viral spread
*CommonSenseTwitter.com
7. Ok, so maybe Twitter can help –
but get to the point already.
How can it help me?
8. The Glossary (twitter terminology direct
from the Twitter help center)
• Tweet: A message posted via Twitter containing 140 characters or fewer.
• Twitter handle: the username you have selected and the accompanying
URL: http://twitter.com/username.
• @: The sign used to call out usernames in Tweets
• Follow: To subscribe to another’s Tweets or updates.
• Follower: A follower is another Twitter user who has followed you.
• Reply: respond to a tweet from a particular user.
• Retweet: Indicated by RT. The act of forwarding another user's Tweet to
all of your followers.
• Direct Message: Also called DM - simply a "message," these Tweets are
private between only the sender and recipient.
• Hashtag: The # symbol is used to mark keywords or topics in a Tweet.
• #FF: stands for "Follow Friday." Twitter users often suggest who others
should follow on Fridays by tweeting with the hashtag #FF.
9. First Steps – Develop your Personal
Branding
• Week 1: Build a Twitter account
• Add a picture – people want to see you
• Polish you bio so it’s short, sweet and relevant
• Determine who will tweet for your company – different
opinions/voices are compelling
• Determine what you will tweet – DO NOT PIMP YOUR STUFF!
10. The golden rule of all networking:
Be more Interested than Interesting
Week 2: Use twitter search to listen for
•Your name
•Your competitors’ names
•Words that relate to your ‘space’
Week 3: Search out things that interest you
•Follow
•Create lists
11. Time to Tweet!
• Week 4: Talk about other people - in your company
(humanizes the company), who you do business with, who
share interests.
• Week 5:Make new friends: Talk to people about their
interests (conversations build trust. Trust = selling your stuff)
• Week 6: Direct traffic: Not always directly – if you get
friends to tweet the message spreads further faster.
• Week 7: Hire people: Need services? Need people? Send out
a message requesting recommendations.
• Week 8: Get feedback: Ask for perspective on how a website
looks, the right course of action to take, advice on topics
you’re interested in or business challenges.
12. WHAT (else) TO TWEET?
• Week 9: Be helpful – share tips about your business or
industry. Share news.
• Week 10: Answer the question, “What has your
attention?”
• Week 11: Notify your customers – Twitter feed
customers can subscribe. Or one on one updates to
customers.
• Week 12: Take Notes.
• Week 13. Tweetup.
13. WHAT (else) TO TWEET cont’d
Ongoing: Use twitter tools for timesaving:
• Monitoring accounts/searching: Tweetdeck, Twhirl
• Scheduling and more: HootSuite, Social Oomph
• TinyURL, bitly, ow.ly, for shortening links
• Pictures: TwitPic, Twitgoo, Twicli, ow.ly, yfrog,
For experts:
• SplitTweet, for managing mutliple accounts
• TweeFree, Peep, Twitdroid, Twitter Mobile or others for cell phone
tweeting
• Twellow for finding people to follow
• JustUnfollow, Friend or Follow, TwitterKarma – who’s following you?
14. So, who are some of those companies?
How Proforma Can Help
15. Proforma. One Source. Infinite
Resources.
Proforma Printlligence
Kimble Bosworth
1400 Rosa L Parks Blvd., Ste 430
Nashville, TN 37208
615.715.0545
kimble.bosworth@proforma.com
http://proforma.com/printelligence
: @printelligence
: facebook.com/kimble.bosworth