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Jan 31st
What Say You About Scheduled Tweets
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
Yesterday’s post about using a tool called Buffer to schedule Tweets throughout the day had some folks cheering and some folks suggesting that scheduled Tweets ruined the conversation on Twitter and were kind of bot like.
What’s your thinking on this. Take the quick poll and leave your two cents in the comments if you like.
Image: born1945 via FlickrCC
View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing
Jan 12th
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
I expect a few raised eyebrows from the title of this post, but first off understand that what I’m asking is could you, not would you.
While there is a growing market for paid and sponsored tweets one thing’s for sure – You can’t sell much of anything unless it has value. What I would like to suggest is that one of the ways you make Twitter a more useful tool is to focus on making your Twitter activity and tweets more valuable.
Value is one of those hard to pin down terms, and even more so with a tool like Twitter, but services that offer paid tweeting programs can actually help you understand your Twitter value baseline. If you want to find out how much your tweets are worth today, go to Sponsored Tweets and sign up for an account.
I’m not advocating that you actually participate in the program, unless that serves your objectives, but during the sign-up process the service will suggest what you should charge for your tweets based on your current Twitter account – effectively giving some measure of value.
If your goal is to find ways to increase the value and influence of your Twitter participation I would suggest making a trip to several Twitter analytics tools to gain some real insight into your Twitter influence. Each of the services below has different ways of measuring and I like something about all of them. The goal in using these tools, however, should stretch beyond simply measuring and move squarely into strategically increasing the value of your participation on Twitter.
Klout – currently the most talked about tool and probably presents the simplest and most trusted measure of influence, a Klout score. The score is based on – True Reach, the size of your engaged audience. Amplification Score, the likelihood that your messages will generate actions. Network score, how influential your engaged audience. It’s worth noting that this is not about the pure size, it’s about what your followers do and who they are.
Twitalyzer – this tool is one of my favorites because there is so much data to play with. You can really get a sense of what impact you and your tweets have through a map of about 20 metrics, including your Klout score. (Here’s an explanation of the terms and metrics on Twitalyzer)
Tweet Reach – this is the simplest of tools and not as useful for me, but they do provide a very useful feature. Tweet Reach makes is very easy for me to view the followers that are contributing the most impressions to my tweets and that’s useful knowledge for future engagement.
In all cases, these tools allow you to get a measure of where you are having impact, but also identify the current users that have influence and that are influencing your scores. I think this is essential because it allows you to see where you could get more impact by creating lists and groups of influencers and engaging them more frequently, even if only through retweeting their content.
These tools, particularly Twitalyzer, make it easy to find people of influence to follow and engage. Remember as you go out and start digging in to these tools as a way to make your Twitter experience more valuable – Engagement and influence is more than follower numbers.
I know there’s still lots of sentiment towards simply being authentic, engaging genuinely and sharing content organically, and while I don’t argue with that, why not bring a little science to the mix to make your work pay off even faster.
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View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing
Aug 17th
| Dewar is one of Australia’s one million Tweeters and nine million Facebook users who turn to social media to let off steam… |
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Aug 16th
| Back in the spring, 24-year-old personal trainer Bobby DeMuro was preparing for a run and chatting on Twitter with a friend, Cara Couture, about foods they could… |
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Jun 14th
| As relief workers respond to the… situation – not through weather maps and TV reports, but through photos and messages on social-media websites. |
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Jun 11th
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For more social media coverage, follow Mashable Social Media on Twitter User reviews: Facebook, Internet, Twitter |
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Apr 25th
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Since Prince Siddartha (aka as Buddha) and Jesus were born respectively 2572 and and 2006 years before Twitter, they never had a chance to tweet. But… |
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Apr 13th
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For more social media coverage, follow Mashable Social Media on Twitter User reviews: Facebook, Twitpic, Twitter |
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Apr 13th
Twitter is finally monetizing. The company will sell keywords to advertisers. When Twitter users search those keywords, an ad will appear at the top of the search results page. Fast Company has the lowdown:
Twitter calls (its new ad program) Promoted Tweets. Advertisers, which at launch will include Best Buy, Virgin America, Bravo, and Starbucks, can buy keywords used by Twitterers in search. When a user searches for one of an advertiser’s purchased keywords, an ad will appear at the top of that user’s Twitter feed. The Promoted Tweets will be in smaller than usual type, and will turn yellow when the cursor is passed over them.
At first, these Promoted Tweets will only be seen on Twitter’s site, not through any client (including mobile clients like Twidroid and Tweetie as well as desktop clients like TweetDeck), and they’ll only be linked to search keywords. Use a mobile app, or use the Twitter site without searching, and you won’t see any ads–for now. But even in this early stage, businesses have more control over Twitter ads than over ads in pretty much any other medium.
When a Twitter user searches for a word an advertiser bought, the promoted message will show up at the top of the results, even if it was written much earlier. The posts say they are promoted by the company in small type, and when someone rolls over a promoted post with a cursor, it turns yellow.
The ads will also be a way for companies to enter the conversation when it turns negative. Several companies have created tools to measure sentiment on Twitter, but until now, businesses can do little with that information. Even if they write a post in response, it also quickly gets lost in a sea of complaints. If a new movie is getting negative reaction, the studio could use the ads to link to a positive review, for example.
Despite the low odds of anyone coming up with a new kind of online monetization model, I was hoping that Twitter would figure out something more original than contextual ads. While such ads monetize, they’re annoying for users, especially when you get them on your feeds or mobile device. I do understand, however, that the company can’t wait forever to implement some kind of monetization plan. Users are used to seeing ads; Twitter is just one more place they’ll appear now.
I’m curious to see how much money promoted tweets will actually make the company.
View full post on Business Pundit
Apr 2nd
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Twitter has turned on a new feature in search that lets user filter for what the microblogging service is calling “top results.” As opposed to strictly |
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