10 ways to build your Twitter following |
Posted: May 30, 2014 |
A friend said, “I am having trouble getting followers for a new client.” Though she was general in her tweet topics (not just self-promotional), she was at a loss. Here were my suggestions, generalized and tweaked as to not identify the asker. 1. Make sure you have a completed profile, avatar (logo), header photo, and background. Your Twitter background shouldn’t be clouds. Most of us are choosy and won’t follow eggs. See: “Baby Steps to the Tweet.” 2. Follow back. Unless they are spam, an egg, #TeamFollowBack, or porn, I follow. One thing I’ve learned in this business is that you never know who is behind the account, whom they know, or even where they live. All business is word-of-mouth, and social media just multiplies that. I have friends all over this country who have accounts that aren’t necessarily local, and we talk (and recommend each other). 3. Nerds like me have lists by geography and topic. Take advantage of the work we’ve done for you. For example, here is the list my primary personality has for my county. Follow those people. It’s a much better way to find new people than buying followers (which is spammy). 4. Make lists by county, clients, and topic. Spend time “lightly stalking those people.” See “Organize Your Twitter Stream—Use Lists.” 5. Start using a hash tag related to your industry, topic, and/or geographic location. Remember, the purpose of a hashtag is to filter tweets by topic. You will see tweets from people you don’t follow. Reply to those tweets, and follow those people. 6. Not everyone on Twitter engages. By now you all know I feel about the Retweet Button, which passes along a tweet but stops a conversation. That is just part of it. The fewer people you have following you, the more you have to work to engage in your home feed. If you want to have friends, be a friend. It’s up to you. 7. Ask questions. People love to answer questions. If you’re representing a bakery, you might ask, “What is your favorite cake to bake?” “What cupcake flavor do you wish you could make?” “Chocolate chip cookies: milk or coffee?” 8. Search on Twitter. Again, presuming you’re running a bakery account, search for “cakes,” “cookies,” “bread.” Reply to some of those tweets. This is what Gary Vaynerchuk (@GaryVee) did with WineLibrary.com. He sat on Twitter answering people’s questions about wine pairings. Now he’s a social media rock star. 9. Sometimes you have to prime the pump. In tweeting for my job, I met a bunch of ladies (my think tank) who all tweeted for businesses. We support each other by replying to tweets and retweeting each other’s accounts. It’s not cheating; it’s networking. Surely you have mutual friends who will support you, even if they’re in other industries. 10. Join a Twitter Chat. This one might be tricky, and it is more advanced: Twitter301. I get high-quality followers from the chats I participate in. See: “Want to Meet More People: Join a Twitter Chat.” They’re also more industry specific and/or engaged users. Check ChatSalad.com or Twubs.com to find these communities. Source:prdaily.com Tagline : PR Agency ,Best PR Agency ,PR Agency in India ,PR Agency in Delhi,PR Company in India,PR Company in Delhi,PR Firms in Delhi,Best PR Company ,Top PR Agency in Delhi ,Public Relations Firms in India ,Public Relation Company India
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|