The mistake many people make is to dive right into Twitter and promote their website in nearly every single tweet. This is a big mistake! You wouldn’t do that in real life, so don’t do it on Twitter. The balance needs to be: more personal updates and less leads to things you want people to purchase.
The mistake many people make is to dive right into Twitter and promote their website in nearly every single tweet. This is a big mistake! You wouldn’t do that in real life, so don’t do it on Twitter. The balance needs to be: more personal updates and less leads to things you want people to purchase.
Provide your real name and occupation or interests. This builds up a bigger picture of who you really are and reassures your followers. Don’t say anything that would bore your follows. You need them to be “happy” If possible, provide a link in your Twitter profile to work you’re doing online or to something that tells more about you online (such as LinkedIn or Facebook). Customize your Twitter photo and background. Twitter followers don’t like seeing the standard Twitter bird as a photo - use one of yourself or something that identifies clearly with you. In addition, add your own colors and maybe even designs or photos to enliven the background of your Twitter page.
Be sure to reply to all @ messages. If your name is mentioned, it means someone cares enough to include you, and it’s important to acknowledge this by replying. Retweet (RT) people’s information regularly and with consistency. This is the lifeblood of Twitter, the sharing of information through retweeting. It’s a form of respect and a way of acknowledging that the person being retweeted is sharing information worthy of retweeting about. Communicate with Twitter users who are already popular. If they notice you and like what they see, they’ll help you in your “social media climbing” by sharing your information with their followers, and hopefully recommending you as well. Leave your Twitter address with comments that you make on blog sites so that people can work their way back to the real you and learn more.
Include links to interesting stories, news items, websites, recipes, etc. Also send links to photos, videos, and other visual treats for followers to look at. Cute animals are often a winner as light relief! Keep the updates flowing at a regular pace so that people know they can turn to you reliably. If a disaster or major event happens in your locality or country, don’t be afraid to switching to it in addition to, or in place of your normal tweets. Share updates and useful information such as phone numbers, emergency information, and shelter addresses, etc. People will readily share this information with your name on it, and you can easily end up meeting many people who are in the thick of providing emergency services, grateful for your support in getting the information out. Bake some Twitter cookies and share the recipe link and the photos of your resulting cookies with your followers.
Follow people. Do this as a daily ritual by focusing on people you have things in common with. Use the Twitter search engine to find people with similar interests; key in words that are likely to make appropriate returns such as “Super Bowl”, “vegan”, “burlesque”, “cheese”, “mom”, etc. Half the fun is in finding new people “just like you”! Follow back those who follow you. Regularly add new people to those you follow, as well as regularly adding people who have added you. Use automated follower adder tools if wished. If you decide to pay for more followers, be sure that there is a benefit in doing so, for your business, brand, or image, etc. For most individuals, payment is unnecessary; use your time and personal effort wisely instead. Monitor your popularity using tools that tell you your popularity status. There are many tools available for this, and they can be focused on country, region, topic (such as “Top LA Tweeters”, “Top Green Tweeters”, etc. ), or other elements you’re keen to know about. Read How to get more followers on Twitter and How to keep your followers on Twitter for more details.
Use the #FollowFriday (#FF) mechanism to list the names of your favorite followers by way of thanks, and as a way of getting their names circulated. In turn, your name gets circulated when they thank you or reuse your #FF list directly. Tailor individual thanks to your followers. Personalizing thanks is impressive; it not only thrills the person you’re thanking but it makes other followers think you’re someone who cares about people individually and this is an important impression to make. One great way of doing this is to pick up portions of their profile and to say thanks by replicating this person’s main points. For example, “My gratitude to @BilbowikiHow - a social media guru with a heart of gold who specializes in horticulture, laughter yoga, & Dr Who memorabilia. Please follow” Say thanks to your followers in a blog. Make it really special by singling out particular followers for your blog post. Write a small piece on who they are, what they do, and why they rock. Include their photo and a link back to Twitter. And then let them and your other followers know via Twitter! This one is always loved and shows you really do care about them. The added benefit is that your blog also gets greater coverage as followers share it on.