Five Business-Oriented People To Follow On Twitter

By Doug Caverly – Thu, 08/26/2010 – 2:26pm.

Practical advice for small biz owners

Traditionally, small business owners have probably used Twitter as a means to broadcast information, or maybe interact with customers, rather than receive advice.  Twitter’s just too full of comedians and celebrities.  A new list outlines five individuals who small business owners may want to follow, though.

Twitter LogoThese folks shouldn’t just adhere to the Twitter cliche of describing every meal and complaining about their commutes.  Bianca Male identified them as “really smart business thought leaders and great Tweeters.”

First up, then, is Becky McCray, an entrepreneur who runs a blog called Small Biz Survival.  Business coach Pam Slim, who’s the founder of Escape from Cubicle Nation, also earned a nod.

Next, there’s Chris Brogan, President of New Marketing Labs, followed by author Tom Peters.

Finally, Male recommended following Anita Campbell, founder of the Small Business Trends site, “As both an entrepreneur and an expert in everything that’s going on in the SMB world, she’s a pretty invaluable resource.  Her Twitter stream features lots of links to great outside articles for small-business owners, and she’ll often retweet other smart people that you should definitely be following, too.”

Here’s hoping you get some use out of their insightful tweets.

Things You Can Tweet About

Things You Can Tweet About

By Stacy Karacostas – Thu, 07/01/2010 – 10:10am.

Wonder what the big deal is with Twitter? Not sure how you would use it to marketing your business? Really not sure what you would even tweet about?

Below are 12 simple ideas of things you can tweet about at any time.

  1. Your free report or white paper with a link
  2. Articles you’ve posted online or on your blog
  3. Events you’re hosting, speaking at, or going to
  4. Newsworthy items
  5. Inspiring or humorous quotes ( you can even quote yourself)
  6. Thoughts on the latest ad, marketing, product or business you’ve seen
  7. The latest good book you’ve read or movie you’ve seen
  8. Links to other people’s articles, audios or videos that you enjoyed or found helpful
  9. Your own questions, whether business-related or general interest
  10. Quick and helpful tips
  11. Whatever you’re thinking at the moment (it’s better to tweet about what you’re thinking than what you’re doing—though that’s okay too)
  12. Retweet other people’s useful, interesting or humorous tweets

The Power Of Hashtags

The Power Of Hashtags
By Stacy Karacostas – Thu, 07/01/2010 – 10:12am.

Are you on Twitter?

If so, hopefully you’ve discovered the power of hashtags (basically a pound sign # and some letters). Or maybe you’ve seen hashtags and wondered what the heck they were.

Well, basically they are a way for you to track what others are saying about you, your event, your product or whatever you’ve created a hashtag for. The most common use is to let you track when someone tweets about your upcoming event. You just create a hashtag (keep it short since tweets are limited in size) then let people know to use it when they tweet about your event. And be sure to use it in your own tweets so it gets attached to retweets.

Then you can track usage on Twitter or using a service like SocialOomph and see who’s talking about you.

Are You Interacting In Social Media?

Are You Interacting In Social Media?

By Mike Moran – Wed, 06/09/2010 – 8:52am.

I got a phone call yesterday from the company that services my central air conditioning unit each year. They had called a couple of weeks ago saying that they wanted to come between 8 am and 11 am yesterday, so we made sure someone would be home. But yesterday morning, they called and said they’d come in the afternoon. I told them that we couldn’t be there in the afternoon, precisely because we’d arranged to be home in the morning as they had requested. And she started arguing with me that we had it wrong and that it was written down for afternoon “in her book.” So I asked her if she’d rather spend time arguing about how this happened or solving the problem we both have. If this sounds like a silly question, it is, but it’s how many of us approach social media.

Too often, I run into people who are fighting social media or, worse, fighting in social media.

Have you been asking yourself why you have to respond to all these anonymous people out there? Are you just plain uncomfortable interacting in social media? Have you told yourself that it’s not worth your time?

These kind of defensive reactions are normal. Human beings are programmed to master things, so being thrust into a new environment where you don’t know what to do is unnerving. It’s natural to ask some hard questions about whether you need to endure this discomfort. And, truthfully, social media is not for every business. If you don’t know why you are doing it, you probably shouldn’t be.

But I run into many businesspeople who know they should be doing it but just don’t want to. They resent the situation they are in, much like the woman from the air conditioning company. She is stuck dealing with something that most likely she didn’t cause, and it’s uncomfortable. Her first reaction is to deny it, to push it away, to blame it on someone or something else, even the customer.

I see this reaction to social media all the time. People marginalize the folks complaining in social media as unimportant (“Who are they anyway?”) or unrepresentative (“Just a few nuts”) or unfair (“What are they expecting anyway?”), something they’d never do if a living breathing customer complained to their face. They’d never react this way to a live customer even if they did not know the customer, even if the customer didn’t provide a name, even if the customer seemed to have an unusual point of view, and even if the customer didn’t seem very fair. If your priority is to serve your customers, you might need to be part of social media. However, if your priority is your own comfort, it’s fine to stay away.

But even worse are those companies fighting in social media. It’s a battle you can’t win, because you are fighting in front of your other customers, who are more likely to take the side of their fellow customers than yours. I’ve seen companies lambasting their own customers on message boards, which does far more harm to their reputation than any customer’s complaint did.

These businesspeople would never have a full-blown argument with a customer in their store with other customers around, but they fire off angry missives on a public message board without thinking. In social media, it’s best to stay calm, no matter how angry someone else appears to be. Act like the well-trained call center representative. Fighting in social media makes both parties look bad. The problem is the angry customer is likely anonymous or doesn’t care how he looks, while you care a great deal.

Businesspeople who rise to their own angry defense when faced with a complaint are under the false assumption that proving they were right will save their reputation. In fact, the argument itself dooms their reputation, because other customers get to see you when something goes wrong, and it’s not pretty. Better to see you correct a “mistake” that might not be yours than to prove you never made one. Sometimes I think that “being right” is the real priority here, rather than customer service.

To the air conditioning company’s credit, the woman quickly agreed that regardless of how the mix-up had occurred, that she’d try to move some appointments around to get to us in the morning, which she did. If you’re still fighting in social media and fighting with social media, perhaps you should move a few of your priorities around, also.

Promoted Trends May Mean More Ad Revenue For Twitter

Another (possible) approach to making money found out

By Doug Caverly

Twitter’s preparing to take another step away from its revenue-less past, according to a new report.  Rumor has it that a fresh “Promoted Trends” feature will complement the system of Promoted Tweets the company’s already devised.

Peter Kafka wrote this afternoon, “Advertisers will be able to insert their own term into the list of trends that Twitter displays on users’ home pages and on its login page.  Clicking on that term would call up a Twitter search results page, which would feature that advertisers’ ‘Promoted Tweet’ at the top of the results.”

(Note: Ian McKellen’s announcement doesn’t have anything to do with the Promoted Trends concept.  It’s just kind of great in its own right, which is why we’ve left both the trending topics bar and his message undarkened.)

Kafka then added, “Advertisers who have heard Twitter talk about the product say the service imagines charging ‘tens of thousands of dollars’ a day for exclusive placement rights.”

Feel free to let us know what you think of the idea.  It could, of course, prove intrusive or annoying, as ads often do.  Or it might meet with some success (consider this: aren’t you more interested in Pepsi, Nike, and Netflix than Justin Bieber?)

Anyway, Twitter’s admitted that it will probably run an experiment, but if or when it will implemented Promoted Trends on a wide/permanent basis is hard to say for sure.

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