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Why You Should Be Involved In Twitter While Having Your Own Blog?

September 22, 2009 by Guest Author

Blogging is fun! I started blogging casually since 2001, moving into my own domain name in 2004, and then decided to blog professionally on my own blog since June 2007.  For some reason or what, I checked out the traffic behavior of my blog.  I have come to realize that the traffic’s up and down has very much to do with the activity that I am doing inside and outside my blog.  The reason is very simple:  I started off without any traffic, hence I need to bring in the traffic!

Many ways to bring in the traffic

While you are blogging, you have unknowingly attracted crowd from the search engines.  You may have also attracted people to link to your attractive articles.  Or, you could have linked to an attractive blog post from a stranger, which caused a trackback link from that stranger’s blog.  Technically speaking, your blog posts are helping themselves to bring in the traffic. However, blogging alone is not enough.  You need to do more things to reach out to the untapped market out there waiting for you.  There are two ways you can do it.

  1. You can spend money to bring in the traffic.
  2. You can spend time to bring in the traffic.

By the way, I’m sorry to tell you that you have no choice but to choose “spend time to bring in the traffic” because I am going to talk about Twitter very soon. 🙂

Using social media to bring in the traffic.  It’s free! But it takes effort.

So far as I know of, the only way to reach out to the untapped market with a single cent is to participate in social media.  Because that’s the only way we can put in our information almost freely.  The social media website owners are more than happy to welcome you to introduce your sites to the visitors.  This is social media’s way of sustaining their businesses.

By the way, blogging is also a form of social media where people can comment on your blog and maybe providing links to their website.

Participating in the social media is all about building your own community who follows your thought leadership.  There are so many different social media websites out there of all kinds.  Well, it will be perfect if you can spend enough time to participate in all of them!  However, all of us  have less than 24 hours a day.  Hence, choosing one or two major social media is sufficient enough!  Or else, you may not be able to build a strong community supporting your thoughts. And I will strongly recommend you to participate in twitter as your first choice of building your strong community.

Why Twitter, and not other social media?

With more and more bigger players jumping into this large whale of tweets, Twitter is definitely a social media not to be taken lightly with.

Twitter has also matured over time.  I can still remember making my first few tweets and there is nobody listening to me.  I virtually have no local friends who can follow me on twitter.  I started to look out for the big names like Robert Scoble on Twitter.  I can still remember I can even chat with him back then.  Now, it’s so hard with so many people trying to talk to him on Twitter.  Back then, retweet was eventually invented by someone who just want to share a tweet he has seen.  It came in various forms such as “RT @charleslau the message”, “The message (via @charleslau)”, “Retweet the message (from @charleslau” and many more.  In fact, it is becoming more or less standardized now to be just “RT @charleslau the message”.

twitter-logoBecause Twitter is based on a very simple 140 characters, it turned out that there are a lot of growth to expand in Twitter because it provides a lot of API to leverage on to expand into different types of third party webwares.  As such, if you can establish your strong followers in time, you will soon be able to leverage on the future expansion that Twitter potentially has with many smart Social Media entrepreneurs out there! So far as I know, Twitter can be used show pictures, sound and links to your followers.  Some others even use Twitter to monitor certain things such as their health status, sleeping patterns, and even track what a plant wants to twitter about! With all the various tools establishing and more to come, your only goal today is to build a strong community around a certain topic which relates back to your blog!

How is Twitter linked to your blog?

While you may still be establishing your blog presence to the world, twitter is a good place to be more personal and to build your community with.  It’s like asking your interested visitors to subscribe to your blog posts, or even to subscribe to your newsletter via email.  Twitter is yet another form of establishment that you will want to work it out as you will learn and grow with this community.  Chances of them visiting your website is very high because they like you through your tweets!  Let’s see how you can start off by connecting yourself in Twitter…

Connecting yourself in Twitter

Twitter is indeed a whole new world out there where you are basically trying to woo more people into your own blog.  However, the methodology must be set properly.  First of all, you must not have the mentality of “What’s in it for me” in the twitter environment.  In twitter, it can be like micro-blogging where you get comments about your tweets.  It can also be like a chat room where you get to socialize with strangers (and of course your good old friends included). Let’s see some bad examples here:

  1. If you try to tweet the same message consistently over time, I can tell you safely that I will be the first one to unfollow you!  I am in Twitter to enjoy myself, while you are out there to hard sell me something!
  2. If you are caught tweeting affiliated links consistently as well, I will surely unfollow you!  It is so irritating to see affiliated links so many times.  Yes, I know you want to make money online… Can you just be more personal and talk to me with no money attached?
  3. Can you not be so robot?  There are some twitter accounts which are basically bots.  They do nothing but to churn out contents after contents.  If these contents are verified properly, I probably won’t mind to follow you so that I can retweet the benefits to my followers!  But if you are basically controlled by keywords, I will surely unfollow you!  That’s because keyword filtering is not always accurate.  I will rather follow people who are more human, and are willing to tweet quality stuff!

Now let’s see some good examples:

  1. If your twitter account is very clear about your topics, I will follow you because it’s part of my passion and beneficial to my followers.  You basically tweet really good stuff that it will not be good for me if I miss them!
  2. If you are really friendly to me, I would love to talk to you.  For that duration of chat, you can be really shocked that people may want to follow both of you just to listen to the conversation that they are interested in.
  3. Retweeted messages are very powerful.  They basically help me to transfer my friends’ tweets to my followers without much effort on my part other than just reading.  And because of the attraction in this tweet, it will just get retweeted a couple of times.  This will increase your followers pretty significantly.
  4. Tell your followers that you have just blogged a new post! We’ll love it!  Look! A chance to connect your blog to twitter.
  5. Do up your own Twitter wallpaper.  It really helps in your brand building for your overall business and eventually for your blog.

Conclusion

I wish to clarify that social media is definitely not going to be helpful to you if you are consistently looking out to make quick money out of it.  Social media is here to have fun!  It’s only with the more hardcore fans, they are more willing to spend some money to get a better deal!  Treat twitter as a brand awareness exercise for yourself.  Do everything that you can to get connected with the media with no strings attached.  Very soon, everybody will connect your blog and your twitter account as one brand! In other words, Think of what you can do to the social media, instead of what social media can do for you!

How has Twitter added to your blog?

This post was written by Charles. He has been an Internet reviewer since June 2007.  He pours his passion for Internet marketing and Internet branding into his Twitter account actively at @charleslau,

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Personal Branding, Strategy/Analysis, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, social-media, Twitter

A Bike Ride Refresher in Social Media Success

September 21, 2009 by Liz

You Already Know How

relationships button

Do you remember when no one knew the word blog? Suddenly, it’s everywhere ? in the New York Times, on the TV News, and in our kids’ elementary schools. The BBC has a blog. So does PBS. Not only are blogs showing up everywhere, but Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube are too. You’ve probably heard stories of companies who’ve had great success with blogs and companies who’ve had horrible results.

Perhaps you’ve even had a social web something go wrong.

Social media is a lot like riding a bike.

When you bike, you need to know how all of the parts ? the bike’s and yours ? work together, where your bike belongs on the road, and how to interact with cars and other bikes. When you enter the social web, you need to know the same kinds of things before you start ? how what you’re doing fits and balances with your company culture, your overall marketing strategy, and your customers needs and desires.

It’s easy to be wildly successful at social ? to get it to take you exactly where you want to go. But it takes a bit of learning at first — like biking does. It’s no fun learning by falling down. Still staying off the bike isn’t the answer, when the kids you want to reach are across town in a park where only a bike can go.

Here’s how to get started on that wildly successful social web presence that you keep hearing folks talk about.

Learn from someone who already knows. Almost every really successful new blogger learned how from some one who’s blogged before. Twitter is way easier to “get” if you work with someone who knows it first. Learn from a social media oldtimer and you’ll raise the speed at which you’ll connect with people and leverage the tools most useful to your business.

Social media is about conversation and community. It’s a chance to talk with customers everyday as you do at a trade show ? only longer, more relaxed, and without the lower back pain that comes with standing on a concrete floor. It’s ongoing discussions with customers about the business. It’s getting close to where your audience, or at least a part of them, thinks and lives. AND it’s inviting them to get to know you and your business in the same way. It’s hard not to like a company, when you interact everyday with someone who works there that you like a lot.

Read some blogs. Join a social network. Follow Twitter before you start. Make a few blog comments too. It’s like getting to know the neighborhood you’re thinking of moving into. You’ll learn a lot from watching and interacting with the folks who are already blogging. Bloggers and social media folks are incredibly friendly, helpful people. You’ll have a network going as soon as you’ve commented on the same blog or in the same Twitterstream for a week or two.

Be a social person people can trust. You don’t need to be from any special department or to have any special title. Be passionate, curious, and happy to learn from others. Reach out to people to learn what they’re about.

Don’t worry if customers have issues. Issues are opportunities to make authentic and human connections. Customers know that things go wrong sometimes. Let them know someone is listening. Invite customers to be part of the team, and products can get better because of it.

Give customers great content — a reason to follow you. That’s what search engine want too. Great interest and great content are great value to folks who meet you. Become a source of content and pay attention. You can pick up the latest trends by interacting on the scale of the web.

Once you get the hang of the social web culture, you’ll be seeing how much your friends and customers can invest in what you’re doing. They can become your eyes and ears for you. They can become your biggest evangelists. They’ll be doing it because you opened the lines of communication to talk to them. ? one human to another.

Grab a bike. Rent one if you have to … the social part is getting to where the people are.

578283_eliza_island_sanjuanislands_washington_usa

Are you having trouble explaining social media? What analogy do you use?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your business!!

Buy the ebook. Learn the art of online conversation.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, refresher, social-media

Trust the Customer … Especially When Learning the Tools

September 16, 2009 by Guest Author

A Guest Post by Jonathan Lansner of the Orange County Register

The Living Web

Trust the customer. It’s never been truer than in the social media world.

This summer, I started collecting for my newspaper’s on-line audience a sampling of lessons learned from folks who ventured with their professional personas into the social media world. While there’s ton of expert opinion available of what works in social media, to me it’s often most valuable when the lesson learned comes from folks using the tools in the fields.

Here’s a sampling of what I’ve learned, and told my “SMagazine” readers at the OC Register Social
…

1. Foremost, it’s really about listening to others. Marty Furman of penmaker Pentel gives a great example of market research gleaned from the social networks, like Twitter: “We’ve heard that Bible study groups use this (eight-color) pencil to highlight areas they’re studying. We’ll tweet to let Bible study groups know about the pencil.” ( @PentelOfAmerica)

2. Yes! What you do write, can be problematic. Tracy Marks of Souplantation
says of the restaurant chain’s social media efforts: “We know we can’t please 100% of the people 100% of the time, but we’re finding ways to please the majority. But that piece – about not pleasing everyone all the time – is important to learn and understand; and let happen.”

3. Don’t be pushy. Corin Ramos of the National Fibromyalgia Association tells me: “Don’t keep reminding your (Facebook) fans to help you get more fans. Pages who do this come across as whiny, needy, ungrateful and, well, annoying. Remember: The page really belongs to the fans, not just to your organization.

4. Embrace criticism. Jennifer Seaton of the Transportation Corridor Agencies says the toll-road agency had to learn how to deal with critical posts made to their Facebook pages. “We tend to respond if there is a question, or just leave the post if it doesn’t include a question. We try to be open, provide information requested and allow negative posts to become part of the dialogue.”

5. And, sometimes, you have to give in. Matt Paulso, marketer of two professional beach volleyball tournaments, admit that “I did find that the things that don’t offer prizes, i.e. polls, don’t really get much response.I was hoping simple intellectual engagement might elicit responses.”

—
Jonathan Lansner is a columnist/blogger for The Orange County Register
newspaper, where he writes SM Magazine, http://ocregister.com/social and the housing blog, http://ocregister.com/lansner You can find him on Twitter as @jonlan

Thanks, Jon! Great points every one.
Bring us more. 🙂

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!

Like the Blog? Buy my eBook!

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Jonathan Lansner, Orange County Register, social-media

EDNet, Adobe, Office Max, Social Media and Education

September 15, 2009 by Liz

Social Media Meets Education?

relationships button

The few days have been filled with talk of education and social media. It seems that business has discovered teachers and the education business has realized that getting social is a good thing. Here’s some news from that direction …

EDNet Conference in Chicago

EDNet is a networking conference hosted by MDR (Market Data Retrieval.) Two years ago when EDNet was in Chicago, folks I talked to showed little curiousity regarding what I did on the web or how it might work in the educational space … though educational publishing is a huge part of my background. This year, on the event’s return to our city, a mere whisper of the term, “social media” and the conversation got interesting. Everyone was doing something or looking to find out more about it.

Adobe and Green Schools in Chicago

Does your community have Green Schools? …

A green school is a building or facility that creates a healthy environment that is conducive to learning. Green schools use less energy and water, fewer resources, and are healthier and safer places for students and teachers while also decreasing operating costs through reduced utility bills. USGBC – Chicago

Adobe has partnered their product with the U.S. Green Building Council and the Mayor of Chicago to “green” a school here. Every time someone signs up for a free trial of Adobe® Acrobat® Connect™ Pro, a twenty-five dollar donation will be made to the U.S. Green Building Council to help a school go green in Chicago. Each city who participates in the program will receive up to $100,000 to create classrooms that foster learning alongside smart environmental practices. Click the badge to find out more.

Office Max — A Day Made Better

a-day-made-better

It was true when I was teaching. It’s still true today. Teacher’s spend an average of $1200 of their own money on classroom supplies.

On October 6, 2009, 4000 volunteers will be taking $1000 in office supplies to surprise 1200 teachers. Office Max has a nice video on their site on their site about what they’re doing.

Business, education, and a little social media — imagine when it gets to be a two-way conversation.

How might these companies make their social media endeavors more social?

I make connections
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your business!!

Buy the ebook. Learn the art of online conversation.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: Adobe, bc, EdNet, education, OfficeMax, social-media

Tuesday, September 15: Social Media Road Trip to Lake Geneva

September 14, 2009 by Liz

Not the Same as College

relationships button

Offer a social media person a car for a few days and what happens? A social media road trip.

In the course of event sponsorship conversations, Hope Betram of Windy City Social was offered a chance to test drive GM LaCrosse, but she’s a city girl. So she invited Theresa Carter, Beth Rosen, and me on a road trip to Lake Geneva to put the car through its paces.

Hope has extensive experience as an event planner, so no simple day trip would satisfy her. She connected with the Grand Geneva Resort and arranged for us to stay there. We chose September15 -16 to accept the invitation to be guests at their beautiful facilities.

Hope and Theresa plan to check out the tourist city for the afternoon. Beth and I are planning a serious work retreat to finalize some details of SOBCon2010.

We’ll try to tweet you or make a video to let you know how things are going.

What I like about this offer to share their products is that the two savvy companies “get” that social media is about bringing people together, not pushing their products. I’m betting I’ll remember their products and services better because of friends and stories — not sales pitches — attached to them.

The whole trip has taken on a kind of “free taste of the ice cream at Baskin Robbins.” feeling. Maybe we’ll like this one, maybe not.

Will you be in or near Lake Geneva, Wisconsin while we’re there? Tweet me @lizstrauss

I make connections
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your business!!

Buy the ebook. Learn the art of online conversation.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, social-media

One, Alone, but not Lonely … in the real world

September 12, 2009 by Liz

I've been thinking . . .

about the number one, about being alone and being lonely.

I’ve been thinking about how separate we are for almost as long as I’ve known me.

One. I was born one.
One of my friends — a twin — said that he so didn’t like being lonely that he was even born with someone else. But you know, I don’t even think being born with someone else closes the gap … between selves.

No matter how close two people get, we are never each other.
We will always be one.

It’s why I like this picture.

948591___01011000__

The minute we try to blend with another … be it a friend or a lover … hopefully we learn that alone is not the same as lonely.

One, alone, but not lonely is a proud and powerful word in the real world.

Have you felt the difference between alone and lonely?

Liz's Signature

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Filed Under: Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, personal-identity, social-media

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