Twitter is all the rage now; I wish I had a nickel for every time a client mentioned it. Succeeding in it is a further topic, though, and at first it can be hellishly confusing.When I first started, and was following dozens of people, I felt like I was in a busy sports bar during the Super Bowl. I remember thinking: I don’t know these people. I don’t know what they’re talking about. I must be in the incorrect place.It helps to know the rules and a small about the culture previous to you jump in. It’s not rocket science but it does take a small study and work.1) Plot: First, reckon about why you’re even on Twitter.Know what you want out of Twitter. Are you there for networking, building a brand, driving traffic to your blog? Determining this early will help guide your strategy and improve your odds.2) Package yourself: First you need to pick out a Twitter ID. Consider your name first (I use @markivey); on the other hand, you could use a further name with your company, role or skills (example: @mediaphyte). You want a touch that will build your brand and/or illustrate your expertise.And don’t skimp on your profile; make it sound engaging, and choose some nice wallpaper—this part is all about personal packaging (you can also customize your own wallpaper, using your company’s logo if you want). Study other Twitter examples because you need to get it right.3) Follow the right people: Twitter is about following and being followed (more on connecting/conversing later) You can use the basic Twitter search or, better, one of the tools I recently reviewed like Twellow in my blog (www.ioncorporation.com/blog, date: Feb 6). These search engines can make life much simpler for you by identifying the right people to follow.Start with the influencers and industry experts in your industry. Find people with common wellbeing and/or just people you want to footstep because they’re appealing. Check out some of the really huge names here. Look for appealing directories and specialized lists; for instance, here’s 10 journalists worth following. And don’t forget your colleagues–you may have people all over your company tweeting. As one example, here’s a partial list of employees tweeting at Cisco.4) Learn the lingo: Previous to you jump in and start tweeting, get up to speed on the lingo and abbreviations. Some common terms*:• “peep”: is a message.• @ ID : A message with the @ sign preceeding the Twitter ID is a comeback message; so if you want to send me a message, start with @markivey. (Note that your entire network can view this message).• DM ID: Putting a DM in front of a name’s ID is a confidential message (you can only send confidential messages to people who follow you).• RT: a retweet. If you find a post particularly appealing, you can copy and paste it and retweet it, as long as you give credit (tools like Tweetdeck have a RT button). (this is one of Twitter’s most appealing features, and how some Tweets go viral).5) Manage efficiently: The last task is to download a “client” to manage your tweets and traffic. Twitter.com is ok for starters but you’ll soon want to go on to a better platform. These include clients like Twhirl and TwitterFox, which have built in search features, URL shorteners (which you’ll need) and nice interfaces to view and respond to your Tweets. Twitterfox is a Firefox extension, while Whirl is a downloaded application.My favorite, though, is Tweetdeck.What I like about Tweetdeck is you can arrange the people you follow into separate, manageable categories. I currently have four categories: “social media” (people who follow social media); “individuals” (business contacts, other influencers in other areas); Favorites; and “all.”But you can set up categories for nearly anything–influencers in your industry; acquaintances/family/close contacts, sports/leisure activities; special lists, like journalists or even by twitterers in your geographical area. Just add a new “pane” for each group.You can also set up search features in separate categories to hunt for certain keywords, like your company name, personal ID or an issue or event (ex: Plates or World Series) . I have searches set up for “Twitter tools” and “Twitter tips.” The default search is search.twitter.com and Twitscoop, which reports on hot trends and keywords in Twitter.One warning: Tweetdeck is a memory hog. It can also be addictive. Plot to set aside designated times, say 20 min. 3 times a day, to check it or you may wind up sitting there watching it for hours.One way to become more well-organized is to integrate Twitter into Outlook with a tool like Outwit. You can update your Twitter status and follow your acquaintances without having to open any other applications.Outwit allows you to schedule your Tweets to be delivered every minute to an hour, and dump them into a separate folder. This way you can check them at your leisure. You can also easily categorize them by name and save them, a touch you can’t do with Tweetdeck. One downside: your email box can quickly get overloaded (as if you need more email).* Resources: there are hundreds of terms thrown around in the Twitter universe, some of the downright goofy. For instance, Twittish means “took skittish to twitter”. Check out this glossary for more.
note: you can follow me at http://twitter.com/markiveyNext: building a community with Twitter.
Posts Tagged ‘Five’
Getting Started On Twitter–A Five Step Guide
Friday, January 22nd, 2010Five Ways to Promote Your Business Online — Part Iv: How RSS Can Attract Visitors to Your Small Business Website
Thursday, January 21st, 2010What Is RSS?
“RSS” originally stood for “Rich Site Summary.” Now it is popularly known as “Really Simple Syndication” because it is a quick and simple way to publicize, or syndicate, fresh content across the web. RSS is in print in XML format and is also referred to as a newsfeed.
How Can RSS Feed Help Your Small Business Website?
In addition to excellent keywords and excellent keyword phrases, fresh and relevant content is a further imp ortant component of SEO (discussed in Part III of this series). Search engines are constantly on the lookout for new content. To do this they use what are called “search engine spiders” to “crawl” websites and add them to the search engines. RSS or newsfeeds update frequently and because of this they add content to a website on a honestly fixed basis. Search engine spiders like this! Your website visitors will too, if you provide them with content that is relevant and appealing. RSS adds to what I call your “expertise quotient.” The more information you can give your visitors the more inclined they are to viewing you as an expert in your field. If they see you as an expert, they are more likely to turn to you (over your competition) for the goods and air force you provide. For instance, let’s say you run a violin repair shop and you are one of two or three in your area. If your website can place forward visitors information about how to care for and repair their violins, you establish yourself as an expert. When it comes time for a violin user in your area to get his violin repaired, he’s more likely to come to you because you’re the expert.
How to Get RSS Feed on Your Website
Use It
The simplest way to include RSS feed on your website is to use feed from other sources. RSS is available on a wide variety of topics. For instance, if had a golf business and you did a Google search for “RSS golf” you would find 106,000,000 sites (as of this writing) offering golf info and most of them providing RSS newsfeed you can use on your website.
Make Your Own
Making your own RSS feed greatly improves your expertise quotient because the information is coming frankly from your own background and experience. Now previous to you write yourself off as not being an expert, take a moment to reckon about what you do for a living. People come to you all the time looking for advice and information in your particular area of expertise. You wouldn’t be in business if you didn’t know your business! Now instead of just talking about it, you can write it down and turn it into an RSS feed. Instant content! Instant expertise! The really huge advantage of making your own RSS is that you can make it available to people all over the ‘Net and those feeds translate into instant backlinks to your website.
For instance, DellwoodWebDesign.com has an RSS page with links from the Inhabitant Federation of Independent Business. The newsfeed features snippets from the NFIB. Clicking on any of those snippets takes you to the NFIB website. That’s an instant backlink for them courtesy of DellwoodWebDesign.com. Now, imagine you making your own RSS feed and having others use it on their sites. If Joe web designer decides to use your RSS on his site, that RSS points back to its source–and that’s you!
But how do you get that feed on your site?
To include RSS on your website you need to use a touch called an RSS aggregator. The simplest way to do this is to use a service like RSSinclude from RSS-Info.com. Getting RSS feed onto your site could not be simpler and it requires very small coding. All you do is find the RSS feed site you want to include, plug it into the RSSinclude form, and it generates the code you need. You can even customize it to make the feed look like it is part of your site.
If you have produced your own feed, RSS-Info features a free RSSeditor that helps you make and upload the feed you make. You don’t even need to know XML. Just fill out the form, answer a few questions and you have instant RSS feed.
The toughest part of the total process is incorpoarting the code into your site and a excellent web designer can do that!
RSS is a way to build instant credibility with your visitors. It can set you apart from your competitors as the expert in your field. It provides fresh content to your site on a fixed basis and it can help improve your website’s page rank. There’s very small reason not to incorparate RSS as part of your small business website.
The Five Tips to Optimize Twitter
Monday, January 11th, 2010Home business owners and internet entrepreneurs alike are actively trying to crack the code to Twitter optimization. The question here is how to do the small things to facilitate viral growth and enhanced google ranking. These five tips will provide a excellent first step toward those ongoing objectives.
1. Account and Usernames
Your username is very vital since it serves as a core relevance item. It’s unchangeable and fundamental to your Twitter identity. It should embody your company’s name in some way so that your followers easily retract it when performing subsequent searches. Choose an account name, which can be the same or different from your username, which followers can refer to you as in a conversation.
2. Bio Content
I’ve seen successful marketers using two contrasting approaches for this content. One extreme seeks to connect with the reader by offering a truly personal and relatable fleeting-tale about them. While this method lacks in optimization, it does have its merits by soft-selling the business’s brand, history or value proposition in a down-to-earth manner. The other spectrum features the company describing itself by using every keyword-rich phrase possible, which intuitively enhances optimizes but at the expense of some readers who are turned off.
3. Leading off
The “lead-in” is approximately the first forty characters of any peep. This text is believed to carry more relevance since this section is what can be used as a title tag. Instead of using the entire peep which could conceivably exceed forty characters, Google will isolate just the “lead-in” for search purposes. Just remember to weigh the keyword density with conversational text that can also positively impression tweets.
4. “Retweetability”
Twitter’s rule of a 140 character maximum includes “RTs”, other usernames, and of course the original peep itself. As most marketers would agree, getting retweeted is the ultimate goal in the social media world. Limiting your tweets to around 120 characters will allow for multiple retweets when accounting for the bonus text.
5. Spreading the word
Don’t limit yourself to Twitter exclusively. The most sites containing your Twitter URL, the most Google will rank it highly. Increasing your back-links on articles directories, blogs, press release sites and video sharing sites are prime examples for spreading the word about your Twitter profile.
Robert Scoble’s five tips for Video blogging
Saturday, January 9th, 2010
www.thomascrampton.com Caught up with Robert Scoble recently – aka scobleizer – who gave five tips for better video blogging. (Including choosing a better camera angle than the one I did with this interview!) Full posting on www.thomascrampton.com
Five Simple Steps to Twitter Optimization
Saturday, January 9th, 2010All types of internet marketers and home based business owners are wondering how Twitter plays into Google’s search engine ranking. The five steps listed not more than should clarity some of the common misunderstandings in addition to offers some simple pointers you can implement when optimizing your tweeting.
1. Account and Usernames
The username you choose to you should have relevance to your company or brand and your followers should be able to easily remember it since its attached to the end of your Twitter url. Your account name shows up frankly after your username and can be the same or different. Choose on an account name which not only promotes your company but also you as an individual and chief.
2. Bio information
There are two different ways to tackle this area. On one hand you could include only the most keyword-rich verbiage as a means to maximize optimization. This strategy is more obviously noticed users are only given 160 characters, but, it’s evenly less personal and down-to-earth. By draw a distinction, other marketers choose the more personal route without the keyword stuffing. These descriptions are evenly more effectual in relating to the reader, but, lack the potential for optimization.
3. Tweeting
The first several characters, or the “lead-in”, in any peep hold more weight in relevancy. Several studies show that this text carries more significance to search engines since it determines the peep’s title tag. Count on the first thirty to fourty characters influencing the “lead-in”. Keep in mind that you need weigh the keyword density with conversational verbiage to it retains a personal touch.
4. Your “Retweetability”
Since Twitter only allows for 140 characters, its evenly hard to include your message along with the “RT” and username text in the case of retweets. Remember that retweets will feature some of the most recent usernames who have also retweeted the message. Viral tweets that spread like reproducing fruit flies should be no more than 120 characters to allow for several retweets.
5. Spread the word
Disperse your profile URL as usually as possible. Common ways of doing this are writing social media articles or press releases so that people will come across your company or brand when learning about the growing industry. Youtube videos that place forward news or instructional content are also key for spreading your twitter information as a byproduct.
Five Easy to Make Mistakes That Keep Search Engine Robots Away From Your Website
Thursday, December 31st, 2009Search engine robots are very simple software programs. If an indexing robot cannot find the content of your website immediately, it will skip your site and go to the next link in the list. For that reason, it is very vital to make sure that search engine robots can index your web pages without problems.
Here are the top 5 elements that drive search engine robots away:
Reason 1: Your robots.txt file is hurt or it contains a typo
If search engine robots misinterpret your robots.txt file, they might completely ignore your web pages.
Dual check your robots.txt file and make sure that you use the disallow parameter only for web pages that you really don’t want to have indexed.
Reason 2: Your URLs contain too many variables
URLs with many variables can produce problems with search engine robots. If your URLs contain too many variables, search engine robots might ignore your pages.
Here’s Google’s official statement about web pages with many variables:
“Google indexes dynamically generated webpages, including .asp pages, .php pages, and pages with question marks in their URLs. But, these pages can produce problems for our crawler and may be ignored.”
Reason 3: You use session IDs in your URLs
Many search engines don’t index URLs that contain session IDs because they can lead to duplicate content problems. If possible, avoid session IDs in your URLs. Better use cookies to store session IDs.
Reason 4: Your web pages contain too much code
Of course, your web pages can contain JavaScript code, CSS code and other script code that is not frankly related to your content. Stay your website with a web browser and select “View source” or “View HTML source”.
If it is hard for you to spot the actual content of your website then search engines might also have difficulty to parse your pages.
Reason 5: Your website navigation causes problems
Fancy JavaScript or DHTML menus cannot be parsed by most search engine robots. Flash or AJAX menus are even worse when it comes to website navigation.
As mentioned above, search engine robots are very simple programs. They can follow HTML links, all other links can produce problems.
Optimized web page content and excellent inbound links are crucial for high search engine rankings. But, the best content and the best links won’t help you much if search engines cannot index your pages.
Make sure that search engine spiders can index your web pages without problems so that your web pages can get the rankings they deserve.
Warmly,
Gary Neame