All Things (a)Twitter – Twitter Knowledge!

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Posted on 26th March 2010 by admin in twitter

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Even if you are new to the internet, the chance are you have heard about “Twitter”, the micro-blogging platform where the challenge is to have your meaningful say in 140 characters or less. Besides stretching the limits of your imagination and honing your haiku skills, this social networking tool has exploded onto the internet (and traditional) marketers’ horizons with great force, and it seems every one from Oprah (the newest celeb to publicly succumb to the Twitter hype) and President Barack Obama (who is using Twitter to help drive his Health Reform Bill) right through to the Pope has cottoned onto the marketing, brand building and social opinion influencing power of this website.

Such is the power of Twitter as an opinion former (or at least influencing opinion) that even Fortune 500 companies have appointed “Official Social Networking Managers” to continuously keep their brands in the minds of its Twitter followers, expanding on the traditional brand building and brand managing efforts, boosting sales and creating more loyal followers in the process.

The internet being the internet showing no favour just because you are a Fortune 500 company, Twitter has brought tremendous power to the smaller internet and traditional marketer as well, where the small operator can generate just as much traffic to his/her website and create an on-line brand, using the same techniques Fortune 500 companies do. However, some Twitter techniques work better than others do (especially seeing it is a SOCIAL networking platform), and those who manage to tap into the social psyche more effectively than their counterparts can be assured of more traffic and a better response to their Twitter “campaign”. Here is possibly where Fortune 500 companies have the edge – they can afford to employ a Psych graduate (or two or three) or even Post Graduates to manage their Twitter campaigns, especially when it comes to shaping public opinion or influencing the netizen’s perceptions about virtually anything – from politicking to introducing a new flavour of crisps.

The REAL power of Twitter lies in that it incorporates what Seth Godin calls “Permission Marketing”. Instead of the traditional “Interruption Marketing” where what you were doing gets interrupted by a marketing message (think of those television commercials during your favourite sitcom), Permission Marketing is marketing you CHOOSE to be exposed to. Because you choose to hear this marketing message (by, in the Twitter vocabulary, FOLLOWING someone or a brand on Twitter), you are already predisposed to listen to what the marketing message is, and far more likely to ACT on such marketing. Suddenly a marketer is no longer an interruption, he has become a friend that tells you about a product or service because you ASKED him to.

Understanding the power and basic principles of a Twitter campaign is one thing. Executing it effectively can be quite another. Remember the Fortune 500 Psych Grads? They were specifically employed because they understand the human psyche, how we react to external stimuli, especially in terms of how we perceive a brand or “value”, and can employ 140 characters to achieve a desired outcome, one tweet at a time. Great marketing if you can afford the price tag.

Most small and medium companies however, CAN’T afford the price tag, and have to opt for the “self-help” option. The “one man show” almost CERTAINLY will have to opt for the self-help option, and here we meet the first real barrier to making use of Twitter to generate sales. How do you get people to FOLLOW what you are saying tweet for tweet, so that you can build relationships with them to the point where they trust you enough to act on your recommendations? More importantly, how can you be interesting enough that those who stumble across you, will actually tell all THEIR friends about you – the RETWEET phenomenon? And how will you convince these new readers to become followers?

A great number of very informative articles and books have seen the light all about exactly these issues, and can go a long way in helping you create and manage an effective Twitter campaign. In the end an effective campaign boils down to relationships, and Twitter is all about building relationships based around common interests. In this respect human nature has not changed much since the dawn of time – we like those who like us (and think like us) and like the same things we do. The psychological term is “Set”, defined as “Readiness to think or respond in a predetermined way when confronted with a problem or stimulus situation”, and like our offline relationships, our Twitter relationships will be better when we are within our own “set”. The first step in using Twitter as a business tool then, is to carefully design your Biography on Twitter, as this is what other people will judge you (and your suitability to be followed) by. Further to this, choose the people YOU will follow carefully, as even in cyberspace, you will be judged by the company you keep. Keep within your “set”.

The question still remains though, how do you get people to follow you in the FIRST PLACE? Make use of all your other communications to alert people to the fact that you are on Twitter – as part of your email signature, on your business cards and letterheads, on every blog post and website you create content for; even word of mouth works very well to generate a following on Twitter.

Once you have a following, treat them like gold, especially if you hope to sell to them at some point in the future. Make sure that at LEAST 90% of your tweets are NOT sales orientated; there is no quicker way to lose followers than to bombard them with sales pitch upon product offering that has no quality content about your mutual interests, or at least is interesting in itself! Also, a little generosity goes a long way in social networking sites. If you read a Tweet that you found helpful, or interesting, RETWEET it to your followers, including the name of the originator. By using the concept of positive affirmation you not only create goodwill towards yourself from the persons you have retweeted, but you also build your own image as someone who is more interested in providing your followers with quality information, irrespective of the source, than just punting your own products and viewpoints. Retweeting also goes a long way in adding to your follower numbers, as someone you have retweeted will be far more inclined to retweet something interesting you have to say to their followers, broadening your potential follower base.

Wishing you the best with your Tweeting campaigns, and may you dominate your niche one tweet at a time!

By: Howard Van Der Westhuizen

About the Author:
Howard van der Westhuizen is an internet marketer of 3 years’ standing, and in his own words “Learnt everything I know the hard way”. His passion is helping others succeed in establishing alternate revenue streams using the internet, and has established a number of sites aimed at teaching the principles and techniques of effective internet marketing. His latest offering can be found at:

http://twitterknowledge.com

Twitter Knowledge is a comprehensive one-stop resource for techniques to use Twitter to dominate your niche, one tweet at a time.



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Social Media Marketing – Do You Know the 3 Differences Between Social Media & Traditional Marketing?

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Posted on 17th March 2010 by admin in social marketing

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OK, tell the truth, what is the first thought that enters your mind when I say the word marketing? I’ll bet if you are honest you will say something like “used car salesman”. Most of us have this negative picture about marketing that conjures up words like shyster and charlatan maybe even snake oil salesman. If the truth be told none of us like the thought of being “sold”.

It’s not really fair you know because without marketing no one would ever know where to get the products and services they need. Even more important than that, there are lots of things you wouldn’t even know existed without marketing. Now it could be argued that we need a lot less stuff anyway but that is a whole other conversation. So in order to “sell” our products and services on the social networks without offending our readers or prospects we need to learn how it is different than traditional marketing.

The first difference in social media marketing is you must develop a relationship with your prospects before you do anything else. You must be willing to spend the time it takes to get to know them and what they want. Then you must provide authentic, valuable, and timely information. The more you give in the beginning the more benefits you will reap in the end.

What I love about Social Media from a consumer’s point of view is that the tables are turned. The second difference in social media marketing is the consumer is in control. In traditional marketing the marketers hold all the cards. They have a captured audience like on TV or radio with commercials or in magazines and on billboards. We may try not to pay attention but a certain amount still leaks through. For the most part we resent the intrusion.

On the social networks the consumer votes for the businesses who provide the most relevant and useful information. There are many ways to vote such as answering a blog post, or using social bookmarking, or by clicking on a link, or joining in surveys, or by re-Tweeting a post, or commenting on Facebook or by viewing and voting on a You Tube video. The most important way to vote, of course, is by doing business with the person providing the information.

The final difference is you must learn is, don’t spend too much time with sales talk or promotion on the social networks. The unwritten rule is about 80%- 90% relevant information and then 10% – 20% promotional material on the social networking sites. I think you will discover that the people with the most followers are the ones that provide the most relevant and useful information for free. Of course it is still up to you to consider the source and research what you are given.

In our world, which has become increasingly more complicated, more rushed, and where everyone is much more isolated, it make perfect sense to me that the newest trend in marketing is the old fashion word of mouth marketing which has always been the most effective anyway.

By: Lauren McMullen

About the Author:
Would you like to learn more about how to use Social Media to market your products or services and how to increase your visibility and credibility online? I invite you to visit http://www.timefinder4you.com and sign up for my free audio series, “The 7 Ways to Use Social Media to Help You Market Your Business Online”. I am Lauren McMullen – Your Social Media Marketing VA and I help coaches, consultants, speakers, authors and other solo-entrepreneurs create a profitable and sustainable internet business by using Social Media to increase their visibility and credibility and to develop relationships with people in their target markets.



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