Friday, October 28, 2011

17 Twitter Marketing Tips From the Pros

Are you looking for fresh ideas to improve your Twitter marketing?

We sought out hot Twitter tips from the pros. Keep reading for inspiration.

Now’s not the time to let your Twitter marketing go stale.

Twitter has already grown more in the last 9 months than in the last 5 years and this trend is expected to continue.

How does Twitter fit into your social media marketing? Here are 17 Twitter marketing tips shared by Social Media Examiner’s writers.

Improve Your Tweets

Mari Smith

Mari Smith @marismith

#1: Share valuable content in your own voice

Do your best to craft your content tweets, @replies and promotional tweets all with a seamless style that matches your personality and/or brand.

Ideally, you want people to read your tweets and feel naturally compelled to click on your links and retweet you.

You just want to add value and have no agenda or attachment to “making the sale,” yet you’re strategic and mindful about how you tweet. Then you’ll see a marked improvement in your retweet and click-through rates.

content tweet

A content tweet from Mari with a link to an informative blog post, and an upbeat comment in square brackets.

Mari Smith, co-author of Facebook Marketing: An Hour a Day.

Debbie Hemley

Debbie Hemley @dhemley

#2: Use keywords in your tweets

Keywords have been and continue to be a relevant and driving force for web content (whether we’re talking about a website, blog post, Facebook update or a tweet). Keywords are the backbone of content.

So I’d have to say hands-down, my best Twitter marketing tipfor business is to make a list of keywords that best describe your business and industry. Use these words as you compose your 140-character posts.

Think quality over quantity. Make every character and tweet count!

Debbie Hemley, social media consultant and blogger.

shane snow

Shane Snow @shanesnow

#3: Share links to useful content

Sharing links to useful content is, statistically speaking, more effective at growing and retaining followers than “engaging” with them in conversation.

That’s not to say that conversations aren’t useful in helping people to like you, but if you want to grow your fan base, you need to share more links than you do @replies.

Shane Snow, co-founder of Contently.com.

nichole kelly

Nichole Kelly @Nichole_Kelly

#4: Use search features to discover what your clients want

Use the search feature in a Twitter tool like HootSuite to watch for conversations about a problem your business can solve. It will give you insight into what is on your prospects’ minds and provide an open door for you to help them.

Try providing a link to a great article or video that answers their question. This one action could lead to an ongoing dialogue that in turn may lead to a customer relationship later.

Nichole Kelly, publisher of FullFrontalROI.com.

Improve Your Networking

kristi hines

Kristi Hines @kikolani

#5: Connect with the right people and tweet with them

There are two crucial things businesses should focus on when implementing their Twitter strategy.

The first is not finding just anyone to follow in hopes that they follow you back, but finding relevant people to follow who are more likely to follow you back. You can bloat your account to 100,000+ followers, but if they are not interested in your content, it gets you nowhere.

You need to be using tools such as Follower Wonk, Twellow and Wefollow to find people who are in your region (if you’re a local business) and interested in your industry. Then start following them.

The second is after you find your targeted audience, don’t just tweet at them—tweet with them. Follow their conversations; add in your two cents from time to time. Follow anyone who talks about your brand and thank them for their compliments or help them with their concerns. Follow anyone who talks about your industry and show why you are an authority.

Doing these things will help you run a successful Twitter campaign that will give your brand exposure as a leader in your industry!

Kristi Hines, Internet marketing specialist with Vertical Measures and author of Kikolani.

Carla Dewing

Carla Dewing @CarlaDewing

#6: Use a classic icebreaker

Most followers become nameless, faceless numbers on a follower list. Remember when networking used to be about meeting people face to face? Icebreakers were important then, and they’re just as important now in the virtual world.

Icebreakers help you share a common connection with a stranger—and make you memorable enough to begin and sustain a long-term relationship.

When you find relevant tweets from among your followers, retweet their blog link—and follow the author’s feed. Then send them an @message, detailing something insightful about their blog post. At the end of the tweet, link to a similar post you’ve written.

This should result in more blog comments, retweets and followers, all from 10 minutes of effort. Twitter is all about icebreakers, and collecting followers who instantly recognize you in a sea of faces. Invest time in your introductions and they’ll make all the difference to your feed.

Carla Dewing, content marketing expert and part-owner of Contrast Media.

Charlene Kingston

Charlene Kingston @SocialMediaDIY

#7: Cultivate relationships

Pay attention when someone tweets about your blog posts or retweets something you’ve shared. When you are building a business, never take it for granted when people help you spread the word. Start by thanking them for the tweet. And take it a step further: add them to a private list for tweeters and retweeters.

At least once every day for five minutes, review the tweets in that list. Look for great content that you might have missed, information from smart people you need to follow and conversation trends you might have missed. Jump into conversations, retweet items your community would appreciate and thank people for sharing great things.

But most of all, get to know more about these people who volunteered to become part of your team by sharing your content. It’s all about relationships, and Twitter helps you build relationships with these important members of your community.

Charlene Kingston, founder of Social Media DIY Workshop.

Jim Lodico

Jim Lodico @jlcommunication

#8: Engage your audience

Find ways to reach out and engage your audience. Too many businesses want to just set their Twitter feed on autopilot or constantly push promotional content.

Although there is a place for the promotional tweet, your feed will receive much more attention if you make it a resource for your followers. Sharing articles of interest, leading discussions on topics important to your industry, answering questions and sometimes just being there can do this.

It’s about creating relationships and building trust in those relationships. Although they may not be clients now, when the time comes, you’ve already cleared the first hurdle for your followers.

Jim Lodico, copywriter and marketing consultant.

sara hawkins

Sara Hawkins @saving4someday

#9: Be helpful

Plenty of people are filling up Twitter streams with the tech-equivalent of screaming infomercials to buy things. Effective marketing on Twitter takes time. But it also takes more than just selling or pushing your message.

Engaging and interacting with your consumers in a consistent and helpful way will keep your product or service at top of mind. Not everyone needs your offering right now. You want to provide information and solutions that keep them reading, so when they need what you have, they know you’re there for them.

Sara Hawkins, lawyer and blogger.

Stephanie Gehman

Stephanie Gehman @airport_girl

#10: Transparency lends credibility

If you mess up, admit it. If you don’t know the answer to a question, admit it. If you’re inexperienced, admit it. If you’re willing to admit that your business is not perfect and is a work-in-progress or open to suggestion, your audience is more likely to take you seriously. You build your company’s credibility and trustworthiness.

The quickest way to lose credibility? If, as a business, you attempt to cover-up, lie or over-promise and under-deliver.

Be honest, be real and be transparent.

Stephanie Gehman, marketing manager for Harrisburg International Airport in Pennsylvania.

Bring Twitter Followers Back to Your Website

tim ware

Tim Ware @HyperArts

#11: Use hashtags to create and curate conversations around your brand

You can reward your followers when they participate by retweeting them or displaying their tweets on your site or blog.

Bergdorf Goodman is a high-end clothing and shoe retailer that is using the Instagram photo app as well as a Twitter hashtag (#BGShoes) to encourage fans to tweet pictures of their shoes (purchased at BG of course) around the city of New York.

bergdorf goodman

Bergdorf Goodman is capturing all of the photos and tweets on this interactive map, which gives users an incentive to participate.

Here’s another example, the San Francisco Food Bank (@SFFoodBank) gave followers a challenge: Try to spend less than $5/day on food. And tweet about it along the way, using the #hungerchallenge hashtag.

Participants are listed on the Hunger Challenge website (and you can pity them in real time as they tweet about their barely full bellies, all captured in the hashtag stream: http://twitter.com/#!/search/hungerchallenge).

carina ost

Food blogger @CarinaOst is one of the participants able to help increase awareness of hunger in SF and promote the Food Bank.

hunger challenge

These tweets were not just blank advertisements; they were an entertaining journal of the struggle of trying to eat on a budget each day!

Tim Ware, owner of HyperArts Web Design.

christine gallagher

Christine Gallagher @ChristineG

#12: Share links back to your website for list-building

In most cases, people aren’t going to buy from you right off of a site like Twitter. You need to shift your thinking from “How can I get this person to buy from me or hire me now?” to ”How can I bring this person into my community and strengthen the relationship with him/her on an ongoing basis?”

One of the best ways to do this is toencourage visits to your blog or website by providing something of value for free in exchange for email addresses. (Make sure what you’re giving them is extra-juicy and useful!) That way, you have permission to keep in touch and build an ongoing relationship with prospects.

This shouldn’t be thought of as list-building just for the sake of boosting your subscriber numbers; rather, it’s a natural continuation of the solid foundation you’ve begun building with a potential client or customer within the Twitterverse.

Christine Gallagher, relationship marketing speaker, trainer and coach.

Janet Aronica

Janet Aronica @janetaronica

#13: Tweet links to your blog more often

When you’re thinking about using social media for lead generation, you want to use Twitter as not only a conversation channel, but also as a way to drive traffic to your content.

I found a significant increase in traffic from Twitter and engagement with our account when I postedseveral tweets of a blog post rather than one the morning. It gives your followers a chance to catch that link if they missed it the first time and also targets people in different time zones.

Don’t be spammy and go overboard, but sharing your content several times (if it’s valuable) will give you the extra edge.

Janet Aronica, Inbound Marketing Manager at HubSpot.

Fit Twitter Into Your Social Media Marketing

stephanie sammons

Stephanie Sammons @StephSammons

#14: Connect your LinkedIn account with your Twitter account

Syncing your LinkedIn account with your Twitter account can make your Twitter activities much more relevant to business. Not only can you share content across both networks simultaneously, but also you can keep track of your professional connections from LinkedIn and follow their tweets!

Here are three tips:

  • Make sure to add your Twitter account to your LinkedIn profile. Visitors to your profile will be able to follow you on Twitter right there from your profile page! Have more than one Twitter account (perhaps personal and business)? Add them both to your LinkedIn profile and designate your primary account.
  • Install the LinkedIn “Tweets” application on your LinkedIn profile and immediately go through and follow each of your LinkedIn connections who have Twitter profiles. In most cases, your professional connections are going to follow you back!
  • Create a Twitter list of your LinkedIn connections automatically with the click of a button using the Twitter application in LinkedIn. This makes it easy to follow the stream of updates on Twitter coming from your professional connections.

Twitter is a firehose of information, data and resources. I’m a big fan of making sense out of that data and making it more relevant to your professional network! Integrating your Twitter account with LinkedIn is a great way to do this. To learn more, catch this article from Social Media Examiner: How to Use LinkedIn With Twitter for Better Networking!

Stephanie Sammons, founder and CEO of Wired Advisor.

Make Twitter Tools Work for You

Ben Pickering

Ben Pickering @bpicks

#15: Take advantage of tools to help curate and share relevant content

Sending out 140-character messages every so often may not seem like a task that requires marketing automation software but, to the contrary, these tools can greatly improve the effectiveness of your Twitter marketing.

There are a slew of services available, some free and some paid, to help manage your Twitter account. At Strutta, we use the HootSuite dashboard to track Twitter activity, which can be easily categorized into multiple streams that we follow.

We also use Summify to help filter through the noise and surface news that is most relevant to our industry. This enables us to find content that is both useful to consume and valuable to share with our followers via retweeting.

Sharing relevant content from other trusted sources helps establish your credibility, especially when mixed with your own original content.

schedule messages

When it comes to sharing, having a platform like HootSuite where you can schedule tweets is extremely helpful.

Given the short shelf-life of a tweet, you can easily schedule content to be pushed out at pre-set intervals to maximize visibility.

Ben Pickering, CEO of Strutta.

Andrea Vahl

Andrea Vahl @AndreaVahl

#16: Add columns of searches in HootSuite

I have a separate tab in HootSuite set up only for searches that I want to monitor throughout the day. I have several columns of searches on this tab so I can see in one glance what people are talking about with respect to those searches at any given moment.

I use a combination of searching on hashtags and searching on just keywords.

searches in hootsuite

In this screenshot, I show one search I have with the hashtag #Facebook.

Then I also have a search where I put the words “how do I” which will give me an exact match on that phrase, and the word “Facebook” which will show both of those key phrases anywhere within the tweet.

I’m looking for people asking questions about Facebook that I can help with. I can then answer the person’s question and perhaps follow them. When you help people who have questions about your niche on Twitter, you stand out as a leader and authority in your field.

Make sure you are authentically helping people out and not giving a sales pitch. So if you want to watch for people asking questions about your niche—which is yoga, for example—you would put the keywords “how do I” and “yoga.” Or you may find that a better search question could be “where do I.” Test out different keyword phrases to see what works best for your business.

Andrea Vahl, co-author of Facebook Marketing All-in-One for Dummies and Facebook community manager for Social Media Examiner.

Still Need Help?

jamie turner

Jamie Turner @60Second Tweets

#17: Get a Twitter tutorial from your teenager

I was at a conference last week where a professor who specializes in new and emerging media made this confession—he frequently asks his students to teach him how to use Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and other social media tools.

He went on to explain that at one point, during one of his tutorials, a student turned to him and said, “Aren’t I paying YOU to teach me this stuff?”

The truth is, if you’re like most businesspeople, it’s very hard to keep up with all of the changes taking place. One way to get more efficient about using Twitter and other tools is to sit down with someone younger than you and ask him or her for a front-lines tutorial.

Oh sure, we all understand the CONCEPT of Twitter, but when it comes to the practical application or the unwritten rules, it’s hard to keep up. The solution, I’ve found, is to not be shy about asking someone younger for a brief, in-the-trenches tutorial. In the long run, it’ll save you hours and hours of anguish.

Jamie Turner, co-author of How to Make Money with Social Media.


Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Video Marketing for Small Businesses

video marketingVideo marketing services for small businesses can be a tough sell.

Small business owners, marketing managers, and bloggers often don’t know how to start a video marketing strategy, who’s video marketing services to work with, and why video marketing is for their blog, marketing campaign, or business.

Last week a partner of mine asked me to do some basic research to help with a his new video marketing and production services. The target market was an in-house list of online bloggers, offline small business owners and marketers of different kinds.

He didn’t want to spend all his time convincing people, he just wanted them to be well informed and then make their decision based on a special offer. So I thought bringing that information to others would be very helpful to people in the same situation across the web.

Here’s the situation I saw with video marketing

On the one hand there’s the self made video and social media rockstars, earning millions of views. And on the other, are the corporate giants and the high priced agencies they hire to get monetization.

It’s just like General Marketing and the Guru Problem.

The benefit of placing emphasis on the medium is obvious. The methods to reap them and the proper understanding are clouded  by the hype, greed, and the corporate drive to make video marketing on sites like Youtube an absolute science.

So let’s get straight to the language of business.

Video marketing by the numbers

Most people who start video marketing usually do so on Youtube.  There are other sites, but Youtube is the big one. They make their
statistics publicly available.  This is a good place to start getting an idea of who’s watching and why the site is worth having a presence on.

You can also peep this quick infographic of the same information from SEOReel.com

A little video marketing research

“Follow the money” is a good rule of thumb for anyone trying to determine the best direction to go in business.These report summaries from E Marketer help us get clearer on where the money is in all this video marketing craziness.

Here’s an projection on spending from 2010, highlighting investment in
online video ads.

Notice the projection for 2012 and how they make it a point to say these are steady gains. Video marketing is not going anywhere.

Small business owners, bloggers, and marketing managers definitely need to start with some type of overview of the audiences they are trying to reach. Here’s another stat from this past February to help with that.

video viewers statisticsThe last line of the summary emphasizes entertainment in brand messages, revealing a key strategy toward any type of returns on investments.

eMarketer also answers some key questions but leaves you with some good thoughts for research if you can’t afford to purchase the reports.

  • How do people in you niche spend their time with media?
  • What do they use and what do they like to watch?

Video marketing: thought leaders around the webSmall businesses need to be concerned about proper focus in video marketing and being aware some of the pitfalls. Marketers and bloggers need to seek out proper sources for content writing and backing up any claims on video services or consultation.

Here’s an overview of some experts located across the country. I’d start here to see what type of advice is being offered up, from what perspective, and then find more people like them.

This interview by Emarketer.com writer/analyst Tobi Elkin with Charles Wax is a great model to start with. Charles talks about some of the best video marketing practices and what to look out for.

Use this interview as a reference for getting important questions answered should you or your client need to get in touch with a provider in your area.

For example, “What do most businesses coming to you want in a video marketing service?”

You can learn to avoid crashing and burning with your video marketing by aligning yourself with the solutions to common mistakes. Sometimes failure is the best way to discover the right way to go. And they don’t have to always be your own. That’s the advice I gave to my partner when discussing bad press. I got the idea from this Mashable.com article discussing mistakes in You Tube video marketing.

“YouTube requires as much thought as any other social media channel and shouldn’t be looked at as a dumping ground for marketing videos,” Justin Gonzalez, social media strategist

The top ten innovative ads were split between TV and online video, according to Mashable. This goes to the credit of online video’s market share and attention factor.

Big brand viral video marketing solutions provider, Feed Company offered AdAge.com a 10 step process for attaining their idea of going truly viral found in their press section of their website.

But going viral is very much an “eye of the beholder” type thing. There’s many paths to success, and you should have other models to research. Feed Company offers a big brand viewpoint which is important in for the big picture.

But my crowd is more the one man operation or the small business. These are people who are looking for the more grassroots approach, using sites like Facebook and Youtube. Closer to home for me here is New York’s own, Catherine Gail Reinhard, offering a more niche frame of reference:
catherine gail
“As YouTube has grown into the preeminent video sharing service online, marketers have tried, with limited success, to broadcast themselves and to reach audiences with their messaging.”Catherine-Gail Reinhard, Creative Director

Her ten step program is another practical resource. Blog Success students can make excellent use of this to begin a proper video marketing brand strategy. Use this as a checklist, at the very least.

Which of these are you doing or haven’t begun doing yet?

Her other mashable article gives an overview of 5 You Tube brands. This should kickstart some more niche research. In each brand there’s a small description listed. Take note and consider how you want to approach video marketing.

Bloggers, business owners, and marketing managers all need to figure out how to drill down into a niche in a mass “marketplace” like Youtube. What categories do your or your clients video brands fall into?

Sources of Inspiration

Finally when all else fails … and you’re just plain tired of reading, conceptualizing video marketing couldn’t get any more fun. Sometimes it’s just helpful to watch a few videos. That’s part of the appeal of video marketing  and video marketing services.

Here are a few places to watch what’s hot across the social networks.

Here’s a resource list of video sites

People to follow on Twitter

This isn’t an exhaustive list. Video marketing experts are all over the place, including in your local areas. These are examples of the kinds of people small businesses and marketers should be on the lookout for.

@catherine_gail
@DavidMurdico
@justinSF
@DaisyWhitney
@SimplyZesty
@SupercoolAgency
@markrrobertson

Bloggers can glean great information and platform off of this short list of video marketing experts and service providers. Later, your research might turn up even better results for your own personal situation.

Hopefully this information has pulled together enough for small businesses, marketers and bloggers to avoid the run around. Don’t waste your time getting caught up with all the content published daily on the subject.  Use the information here to get on solid ground. Then go get a piece of that video marketing pie. It’s delicious.

Guest post by Christopher Flores

Monday, October 3, 2011

YouTube Marketing Tips for Better Engagement and advertisement.

Jason Weaver is the CEO of Shoutlet, an enterprise social management software company he founded. He has been involved in social media strategy development since its inception for brands that include Disney, SC Johnson, and eBay.

In addition to its incredible success as the de facto portal for video uploads and viewing, YouTube is itself a community. For brands, it provides an additional viable opportunities to spark discussion with followers. It’s a place to build relationships and create a space for users to converse with each other about branded content.

Just as Facebook has become an incredibly popular place for brands to maintain a dialogue with their customers, YouTube offers a similar opportunity, although the conversation is driven primarily by video content. Treating YouTube not only as a platform for video distribution, but as a forum for engagement deepens the customer experience.

So how do companies make the most of the conversations happening on YouTube?


1. Start With Great Content


 

Whether you’re a popular consumer brand or an emerging B2B company, engaging content that prompts discussion and social pass-along requires outside-the-box thinking to make an impression (pun intended). Like any other content provided to social audiences, videos on YouTube must be engaging and compelling enough to spark those discussions and encourage sharing.

A classic example of this is “Will it Blend?” Blendtec’s famous video campaign that purées popular gadgets is an ingenious way to captivate viewers while demonstrating the power of the product. The ROI equaled its creativity, with sales jumping 700% since the campaign started four years ago. Great content brings users to your channel and your videos; engaging them once they arrive is another challenge.


2. Don’t Post Your Videos and Run


 

Pairing good content with a commitment to engaging viewers and commenters will help strengthen those relationships on YouTube. Old Spice is a fantastic example of how great content worked in conjunction with a smart response strategy. After an intensely popular run for its initial commercials, Old Spice took the relationship building potential of the YouTube community to a new level by creating 180 individual video responses to those who commented on the originals. It’s now highlighted as one of the most successful interactive campaigns in history, with 40 million impressions in the first week and a 107% jump in sales after the first month.


3. Know Thyself


Understanding what your brand voice is and what your goals are will shape how your brand interacts in this space. Are you aiming to be a resource for your customers with how-to videos? Be ready to respond to questions and be as helpful in the comments as you are on film. Going strictly for the fun factor? Take a cue from Old Spice and approach your responses with the same attitude in your content that got the discussion going in the first place.


4. Use Data to Inform Your Actions


 

Pull lessons from platform-specific data points, such as what people “like” and “dislike” on YouTube. Initiate discussion about what’s popular and what’s not. Your viewers are voting with a thumbs-up or thumbs-down — try to get a dialog going about why.


5. Cross-promote


There are discussions happening on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, often about the same content. If you post the same video to Facebook and YouTube, draw on conversations happening in other spaces.

For example, when you post a video to Facebook that’s seen traction on YouTube, point it out in a post:

“10,000 people in Acme’s YouTube community ‘liked’ this video. What do you think? Tell us here and join the discussion on YouTube.”

You’ll expose different parts of your community to other opinions and potentially encourage others to join the conversation regularly on more of your company’s social pages.


Like Facebook and Twitter, YouTube can be a fertile ground for interacting with your customers. Its features and content may differ, but the basic principles for interaction remain the same. Keeping this in mind and taking a savvy approach to YouTube responses can help your company make the most of this incredibly popular social space.