14 Ways to Use Twitter to Market Your Business
Twitter experts, marketing pros and business leaders share their top tips on how to turn 140 characters into online marketing gold.
At the time of its SEC filing in early November 2013,
Twitter had more than 232 million active monthly users, 53 million of which
were in the United States. That makes Twitter a potentially powerful marketing
tool -- if you know how to use it.
Twitter, Twitter tips, Twitter marketing tips
So how can you leverage the popular 140-character social
media site to drive more traffic to your business or website? Dozens of Twitter
experts, marketing pros and business leaders who have used Twitter to market
their brands, products and services share their top 14 tips for how to
successfully market your business on Twitter -- or employ Twitter as a
marketing tool.
1. Optimize your Twitter bio. "Make sure your company
identity and voice are branded well," says Jon Ferrera, CEO, Nimble, a
provider of social CRM. That means having a bio that tells people who you are
and includes a link to your company website or a landing page -- and having
"a consistent tone so that people clearly understand who you are and what
you do."
2. Find out who the influencers and experts are in your
target area(s) and interact with them on a regular basis. "Use Twitter
search or a tool like Topsy [or Followerwonk] to find like-minded prospects,
customers and influencers/media by searching keywords that relate to your
industry," says Stacey Miller, social media manager at cloud marketing
provider Vocus. Then follow and interact with them on a regular (daily) basis.
"Make a list of the 100 most influential people in your
space -- journalists, thought leaders, potential clients/customers, big-name
bloggers and writers, potential partners, etc.," says Shanelle Mullin, the
director of Marketing at Onboardly, a provider of PR and content marketing for
startups.
"Add them to a private Twitter list and engage with
them daily. (Tools like HootSuite make managing this process much
easier.)" And remember to "be casual [and helpful], not
promotional," Mullin says. "Build a real relationship and then look
for opportunities to collaborate."
3. Get colleagues involved. "The first people to help
build your brand should come internally," says Amanda Cohen, marketing
coordinator, Homescout Realty. "Make sure your coworkers are following you
on Twitter and tweeting, retweeting, engaging, etc."
4. Tweet regularly. "Regular tweeting is a sign of an
active, healthy profile," says Sandra Fathi, founder & president,
Affect, a public relations and social media firm. "If you only tweet once
a week, or once a month, you aren't keeping up with the Joneses [or the Twitter
equivalent]. Worse, folks will forget about you," she says.
"I recommend daily postings and engagement so that you
are top of mind on a consistent basis," Fathi says. Just be sure you are
tweeting relevant or useful information, content your followers will read, click
on, retweet and/or favorite.
5. Don't be afraid to ask for some Twitter love. Ask
followers to retweet, mention or favorite your tweets -- or to share content
with a fresh tweet.
6. Track mentions -- and respond if appropriate. "Track
brand mentions and keywords to make sure [you know what's being said about
you]," says Vikram Bhaskaran, director of marketing at Freshdesk, a
customer support Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solution. And be sure to respond
in a polite, professional manner if appropriate. "After all, customer
service is the new marketing!" And many customers now post their product
queries and complaints on Twitter.
"Set up Twitter searches for terms relevant to your
brand," adds Ginger Geoffery, director, Social Marketing, The Mac Groups,
a social media agency.
"Monitor the conversations in that search and jump in
to the conversations when appropriate," Geoffery she says. "For
example, say you're a dentist in Buffalo. You could set up a search for the
term 'dentist Buffalo.'" Then, when "you then see someone in Buffalo
tweet 'I need to go to the dentist but it's so hard to get an appointment,' you
could jump in and [tweet], 'We'd love to have you as a new patient.'"
7. Retweet. "Don't be afraid to retweet as this will
help link you with and cement your own thought leadership within your
industry," says Mark Rushworth, head of Search at Blue Logic Web, a Web
services provider.
8. Favorite tweets. "Many people don't know about
favoriting tweets, but it can get someone's attention more than a retweet or a
mention," says Amy Marshall, COO, Fathom, a digital marketing and
analytics agency.
9. Follow trends/hashtags. "Look at the trending topics
and hashtags and find a way to make a relevant connection to your brand,"
says Crystal Cantabrana, director of Operations, Grizzly Group LLC, which
provides social marketing solutions. "By putting your business among the
trending topics, your handle will be seen when people search tweets regarding
that particular hashtag."
"Tagging our posts with one or two relevant and
trending hashtags has [helped us] to reach new users," says David M.
Burrows, vice president of marketing & PR, Cinsay , an online video
commerce company. However, "hashtags should be used sparingly, as they can
be seen as 'Twitter spam' when over used or attached to irrelevant
content."
10. Offer discounts or special deals to Twitter followers.
"Run Twitter contests such as: 'The next 50 people that retweet me will
receive a coupon for 50 percent off,' or have people post pictures of
themselves in the store or using the product and do a random drawing,"
suggests Marshall.
11. Use images and videos. "Get visual," says John
Lee, manager, Brand + Social Marketing, Webtrends, a digital marketing
solutions provider. "Photos and videos drive three to four more clicks on
Twitter."
"Images, videos and other rich media have proven to
receive more views, clicks and shares than plain text tweets," says Marko
Muellner, vice president, Marketing, ShopIgniter, a social performance
marketing platform.
"While community managers may be doing a great job
engaging followers, a banal post about enjoying the weekend is much less
effective than rich, in-stream content in which someone can, for example, view
a film trailer and find out where the movie is playing in their
neighborhood," Muellner says. "In fact, research shows that rich
tweets have significantly lower negative feedback rates as consumers appreciate
interactivity and content designed for their social mobile context."
12. Use Promoted Tweets. "Be sure to directly target
your audience with Promoted Tweets," says Bryan Shaw, community manager at
3dcart, an ecommerce platform. "Failing to define exactly who you're
trying to reach [could] cost you time and money."
Just "be sure that your promoted tweets aren't
spammy," says Aaron Endré, a marketing and PR expert helping B2B tech
startups. "The goal is to provide value that establishes trust and
credibility, not trick people into clicking a link."
And "Keep it fresh," adds Alicia Antoniolli,
account manager, Social, 3Q Digital, a digital marketing services provider.
"Make sure your promoted tweets don't run for too long." If you want
to continue to get that message across, find a slightly different way to say
it.
13. Make sure Twitter is integrated with your other
marketing efforts. "Twitter, like other social media platforms, is much more
effective when integrated with your other marketing activities," says Mark
Schmulen, general manager, Social Media, Constant Contact, an engagement
marketing company. "For example, if you're running a promotion or contest
on Twitter, let your email subscribers know about it, as they are another
customer base who have already let you know that they want to receive messages
from you," he says. "Inversely, by occasionally tweeting out the link
to your mailing list, you can also tap your Twitter base into your email
content."
14. Use Twitter analytics. "Use Twitter's native
analytics daily to get a grasp on what's resonating and what's not with your
audience once you've built it," says Miller. "In the analytics
dashboard, you'll be able to tell what your best days to tweet are, the types
of content that are more favored and the demographics of the followers that
you're attracting," she says. Then you can "replicate what's working
and rework or reevaluate posts that aren't."
Jennifer Lonoff Schiff is a contributor to CIO.com and runs
a marketing communications firm focused on helping organizations better
interact with their customers, employees, and partners.
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