twitter – who cares?

Spring 2009 is all about social media education, and Twitter is on the tongues of everyone from devoted power-users to confused newbs who can barely use a mouse.

Despite all the hype, news programs and even devotees haven’t quite hit their mark.  I keep running across the same question over and over again…why should I care about Twitter?  Who gives a hoot about whether you had a croissant for breakfast, anyway?

In lieu of writing a thesis on the subject (and if you really want to hear the advanced reasoning behind my use of Twitter, pretty please come to my new Twitter class June 25 and July 9), I’ll give some simple answers.

Why should you care about Twitter?

It’s all about conversation.  If you aren’t having a conversation with your potential clients and colleagues via social media, you’re missing the boat.  Twitter doesn’t just give you an unprecedented chance to engage with your base…it allows you to start, shape, and exert a degree of cotrol over the conversation that just can’t be achieved by a press release, a sound bite, or an advertorial.  And the options are endless:  you can talk directly to your base, ask them questions, gauge their opinions, solicit their feedback, be helpful and offer advice.

It’s happening.  Whether or not you like it, Twitter has taken off in a big way.  Does every business need Twitter?  No way.  But don’t dismiss it because it’s new, trendy, and admittedly overhyped.  The amount of creativity and excitement generated by Twitter is truly energizing and engaging…if you know how to use it properly.

It’s opportunity.  Opportunity to find out what your customers and your colleagues care about.  Opportunity to make mistakes, hone that brand, and get deep into voice and vision.  Opportunity to dip your toe into a huge conversation and watch it morph before your eyes.  Opportunity to be on the cutting edge before it changes into something else (just look at the evolution of hashtags over the past few months). And, yes, opportunity to get business.  I can count twenty or more instances in which Twitter has brought me business or allowed me to refer business to someone else in the last two months alone. Now that’s opportunity.

Sure, you may think you don’t care about whether your client had a donut or a croissant for breakfast…until you use that fact as the launchpad for a personal conversation.  Twitter can seem scary:  it’s immediate, vast, and fast.  It’s also vibrant, thrilling, exciting, maddening, and hilarious.  Go ahead…dip that toe in.

Readers, why do you care about (or shun) Twitter?

Photo courtesy of godsmoon

flex your social media muscle
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • LinkedIn
  • Ping.fm
  • Twitter

related posts:

  1. Backscratchin’: 10 Ways to Use Social Media to Promote Others
  2. Five Ways to Fail Your Brand
  3. this week in marketing, social media, and brand strategy (week of january 25)

2 Responses to “twitter – who cares?”

  • Hi Erin, thanks for sharing your thoughts on the use of Twitter. Do you offer some of the simple “how to” stuff in your course re: using Twitter? ie. I’d like to jump into more conversations and need to know some basics – how do you direct message someone? (from their follow/home page) how do you re-tweet? how do you get links to appear in a shortened form in a tweet? I realize these are basic questions but I could be having a lot more fun on Twitter if I could figure out how to fully participate :) I welcome your help – you seem good at it!! To your success, Lynda

    Lynda Monk, Life & Writing Coach
    http://www.creativewellnessworks.com
    Author of Life Source Writing: A Reflective Practice

  • erin:

    Much-belated, Lynda, but yes, we do offer those tips in our course.

    Long story short: to retweet, simply type RT and the person’s handle preceded by the @ sign, then rebroadcast the tweet in question. So if you liked my tweet that said “Linda rocks,” you’d format it “RT @vococreative: Linda rocks.”

    To direct message, you must be both following and followed by the person in question. Then you can hit “send direct message” on the button that comes up on their Twitter stream or their name in your stream.

    For shortened links, try a service like http://bit.ly or http://www.tinyurl.com

    Hope this helps! Erin