Tag Archives: Ask Questions on Twitter

Twitter for Business by the Numbers: 7 Ways to Tweet-For-Profit

Twitter Power for Business is an awesome LinkedIn group if you want to hobnob with folks who understand and use the power of  the ultra-popular microblogging site to (a) listen, (b) converse, (c) promote, and (d) build profits.

This blog recently featured “What to Tweet to Stand out from the Masses” and I am currently working on the article How to Become a Twitter All-Star Brand.

My research has included a check-in at the Twitter Power for Business group on LinkedIn, where I found a great discussion by Reese Ben-Yaacov.

Reese is the CEO and Founder of Assistant Connect, a Virtual Assistant Business. She has worked as an Executive Administrative Assistant to C-Level Executives for more than ten years and is passionate about the Internet, Emerging Technologies, and Social Media Marketing.

Here are some of her services [for you Social Media Virtual Assistants to think about[

Calendar Management
Travel Management
Relationship Management
Project Management
Human Resources Recruiting
Document Creating and Editing

in addition to: Social Media Marketing Management such as LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube


7 Steps for Marketing Success Using Twitter

Guest Post by Reese Ben-Yaakov

One of the hardest things about marketing on Twitter is that it doesn’t even look like marketing.

In fact, the closer you watch those who have made a success using inbound marketing techniques, you’ll see that it seems that they’re not doing much of anything at all. Sure, they’re talking to people and sharing some great resources, but that can’t be marketing …

But it is marketing – and it’s a powerful kind of reverse-marketing. It’s relatively easy, it’s fun, and it’s really effective.

Looking for ways to tap into this almost effortless style of business promotion? Here are seven easy steps you can follow:


1. Choose Topics Outside Your Niche

As hard as it may be to swallow, you are not your niche. A niche is something you have. But it is not who you are. Choose 5 other things you could possibly Tweet about. On my list are technology, parenting, water safety, and of course the weather here in HOT Jerusalem. Find more opportunities to Tweet and talk about other things than what your business is. Getting people to like you first is a great place to start on Twitter.

2. Define the Personality You Want To Reach
Thanks to David Meerman Scott, we have the concept of buyer persona and a method for applying it to marketing. Thanks to the Myers Briggs Type Indicator, we have a tool for getting inside that buyer persona’s mind. It was easy for me to choose ENFPs (Extraverted, Intuitive, Feeling, and Perceiving) as my target market. They’re the types who get lots of ideas and are natural entrepreneurs but struggle with things like internet marketing implementation. 4 little letters can give you a lot of potential Tweet ideas.

3. Use the Search Button at Least 3 Times Per Day + Tweet at Least 15 New People
Lots of Twitter help articles will say “Join the conversation!” but if the people you’re following don’t seem to engage in conversation and only promote themselves or send out quotes for Re-Tweet bait, what are you supposed to do? That’s where the search button comes in. Search for something you’re interested in. Find someone you’d like to talk to. Then repeat as much as possible. Use your @ function more than anything else. Engage, don’t broadcast.

4. Ask 5 Questions on a Daily Basis
Once you start to find more followers, just ask questions. Will they always get answered? No. But did it cost you a ton of money to ask? Absolutely not. You can’t take it personally if no one answers the first time around. But if you’re focusing on your buyer persona, you get closer to getting inside their mind. You’ll know you’re asking the right questions when you start to get responses. Easy to do, easy to measure.

5. Answer at Least 3 Questions Daily
The fewer questions someone has on their mind, the more at peace they are. Questions, especially ones that don’t get answered, are the things that keep us up at night. Though it might seem extreme to say, it’s very likely that anytime you answer someone’s question via a Tweet, you’re helping them sleep better at night.

6. Send Out 10 Useful or Entertaining Links (But Be Sure To Track!) Every Day
While desktop applications like TweetDeck or Twhirl offer convenient URL shortening, they are not necessarily the best. You’re missing out on one of the best features of Bit.ly and other URL shortening tools like it: click tracking. This is the simplest way to find out if you’re Tweeting things that your Followers actually want to know about. Just sign up for Bit.ly’s service and Tweet from there when sharing articles and blog posts.

7. Share at Least One Blog Post, Article or Video Per Week
There are so many options for connecting your blog posts, articles, videos, and all your content to your social media venues. But self-serving promotional content just doesn’t cut it. Remember the question theory? Use it to your advantage. Think of the questions your target market (or even better, your buyer persona) has and make sure your content answers those questions.

What works on Twitter for you and/or your company? How do you “get what you want” from your Tweets?