21 tips to Micro-blogging for your company
Lots of companies are setting up Twitter accounts, some quite randomly, others with a well thought out strategy. I have observed quite a few in my work place being set up and here is a list of some of my recommendations
- Establish a regular schedule of blogging, make it a part of daily work
- Ensure the staff involved are enthusiastic and willing to blog
- Blog interesting stuff – not “I am having coffee”
- Work out who you would like to read you Blog
- Maintain a record, register, or signature so who blogged what can be tracked back
- Attempt to respond to all comments of relevance
- Use links to more detailed information regularly
- Use a URL shortening service to abbreviate links – e.g. Bit.ly
- Keep retweets to a minimum, and attempt to retweet authoritive sources
- Keep obscure and self descriptive tweets to a minimum
- Have an attractive, well designed home page with relevant links attached
- Read updates before following back a follower
- Use an aggregator to search for competitors blogs and monitor the environment
- Use an aggregator to combine similar topics and monitor sentiment
- Respond and resolve customer comments, complaints where possible
- Cross promote blogs, web sites and social media where possible
- Do not get distracted by ROI and results of micro-blogging currently – just do it
- Integrate micro-blogs into other social media and web sites
- Don’t overuse emoticons
- Don’t be afraid to add comedy on an occasional basis
- Discuss as part of business strategy and monthly meetings
Next post I will try and find some great micro-blogging Companies
One Comment
Very comprehensive collection! One major factor is simply taking it for what it is – a vantage point to record real-time events and exposure of what’s going on right now, tracking news and updates, immediate alerts (e.g. your order has arrived) rather than email response delay. The bonus for micro-blogging in particular is its ability to sustain itself via RSS feeds – busy companies can relax a little on maintenance if these tools are structured to inter-operate with one another. Again, nice read
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