Google is definitely showing its all out support to Twitter. Aside from the Google Replay feature which lets you view past tweets related to your current Google search results, Google has also launched Google Follow Finder . Available right now on Google Labs, Google Follow Finder makes it easier to find and follow Twitter users which you may choose to follow. Yes, this is definitely different from those “autobots” that automatically makes you follow people whenever they follow you unless you made it a prerequisite to have your approval first before following people on Twitter. Using Google Follow Finder, you simply need to enter your Twitter account and the online tool will give you other Twitter members who are not yet in your following list. It’s now then up to you whether you will follow them or not. It also works if you enter other people’s Twitter account. You can do all this without visiting your account on Twitter.com. Google Follow Finder utilizes Twitter’s new @anywhere frameworks which was just announced today at the Chirp conference for Twitter developers. Twitter’s @anywhere makes it easy to add Twitter functionality to any websites or blogs. So now at least, the next time you want to find people to follow on Twitter, you’d have a chance to choose which one are interesting and which one are not. Incidentally, if you are not yet following me on Twitter, you can add me up – @aczafra. You might find my “auto tweets” quite interesting. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Google Quickly Uses Twitter @anywhere on Follow
Tag Archives: people
Does Your Company Twitter? 10 Tips To Become A Great Business “Twit”
What do you think of when I mention Twitter? Do you think about teenagers posting what color socks their wearing to school today? Or do you think about the sales/conversions your company makes by utilizing these accounts? Social media is a fantastic way to increase your brand exposure. By creating a successful Twitter account you essentially have a direct line to your customers. Utilize the following tips to gain “followers” and to maximize your company’s Twitter experience. 1. Carefully Choose Your Twitter User Name Make sure you put some thought into what username you want to use on Twitter. Do you want to use your company name, brand name, or your full name? Each one of these types of user names has an advantage, for instance we use @DKS_Systems for our Twitter user name. @billgates chose to use his real name even though he is the founder of his company Microsoft. It’s up to you; decide which one is the best fit for your company. 2. Your Twitter Image Your Twitter image is what everyone will see next to your username. Every time you publish a tweet people will see this image. Does it make sense to put your company’s logo as the image? Alternatively you can post a picture of yourself. Considering Twitter is a social network I like to suggest that everyone posts a picture of themselves. This I believe adds more of a community feel and less of a B2B connection. I find that it’s easier to get people to follow your account with a personal picture than a company logo. This is an issue you can always test as Twitter easily allows you to update your picture within your account settings. 3. Twitter Profile Optimization The search engines will index your Twitter profile so it’s important to optimize as much as you can. Below are a couple fields you can change to help your profiles search rankings. Title Tag – This is your “Name” followed by your Twitter user name. Meta Description – Google shows your profiles “BIO” as your meta description. So keep in consideration whatever you type here is what will show up in the search engines. Your website URL – take the www out of your URL. This way people can see more of the actual web address. Twitter only shows 17 characters. Our website address just makes the cut and shows “http://dkssystems” 4. Customize Your Twitter Background Twitter allows you to create and display your own custom background. Create a background image that displays more information about your company! (I will freely admit that I too really need to work on this tip!) This is by far the best resource I can point you to on how to create the best Twitter background for your account. 5. Be careful who you follow You may not have any control over who follows your account however you do have full control over who you choose to follow. Don’t follow any accounts that you wouldn’t be willing to explain to your boss or even your clients. I have never seen this being an issue however it would be a real shame to lose a sale/client over you choosing to follow a specific political candidate or questionable celebrity. This tip doesn’t apply to every user; however it’s something to keep in the back of your mind. 6. Use Hash Tags In Your Tweets It’s very important that you use Twitter just like everyone else on the website. #hashtags help categorize your tweet in with a specific topic. If you’re talking about SEO you might want to consider adding #SEO at the end of your tweet. This way anyone who is searching for “SEO” tweets will find yours in the results. 7. Don’t Spam People Who Follow You! Remember how I suggested that you be careful who you follow on Twitter? If you send out ten tweets in a one minute period your followers are going to be annoyed. If you annoy them enough they may just un-follow your account. You need to publish your tweets sparingly. I would suggest a couple of tweets an hour at most. This is just a general rule and is something you will need to figure out as you get use to your Twitter account. 8. It’s Not All About Business Don’t bombard your followers with your company’s products and or offers. Twitter is a virtual hang out space for everyone. If someone in real life got in your face and tried to make you buy something wouldn’t you avoid them each time you saw them on the street? However, if one of your “buddies” suggested you go see the latest movie or buy a certain product wouldn’t you take it into a little more consideration? Make sure to tweet about everything. The color of your socks, your amazing fast food lunch, and a funny joke someone told you etc. After several of these posts you can slide one or two tweets advertising your product or service. 9. Think Before You Speak… I Mean Tweet How many times have you read in the news about a celebrity or a successful business person putting their foot in their mouth? People don’t always think before they tweet. Twitter is not a place for you to complain about your clients or customers. You don’t want to say anything that will sabotage your brand or company either. My rule of thumb is before I submit a tweet I ask if my boss would be ok with reading this. If I think it’s questionable I will re-phrase it or choose not to tweet that message. Just remember to think before you tweet, if you don’t you may get yourself and or your company in trouble! 10. Personal Messages and Re-Tweets As mentioned before, Twitter is all about being social. Talk to your followers, ask them questions, and make sure to answer any questions they may ask you. You want to maintain a form of friendship with your followers. Twitter allows customers/clients to have a direct access to you that they otherwise wouldn’t have. Take advantage of this, write them personal messages. (Tweets only they can see) Also make sure to re-tweet (RT) their tweets if you find it interesting. Building these relationships may help you create some sales in the future. Have You Created A Twitter Account Yet? I hope that this article has shown you the value of investing time into Twitter. Twitter is a fantastic way to keep in touch with your existing clients and customers. When customers get a sense of satisfaction they are more willing to make additional purchases. Twitter also gives your company an opportunity to reach out to people interested in your niche. Engage with them and answer their questions, you may just have another customer in the future if you do it right. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Does Your Company Twitter? 10 Tips To Become A Great Business
When to Take a Social Media Break
Twitter became my priority. It became my obsession. I should’ve been shutting down and enjoying a moment in life, a moment I can never get back. Instead, my mind was focused on how to condense the moment into 140 characters and share it. Looking back, I lost memories and failed to get the most out of many experiences because I was too busy thinking about how to share. I lost track of the moment. Around 3 months ago, I decided enough was enough. My life had become a massive extended relationship. I was losing focus on the core people, and priorities, in my life. I was spreading myself too thin for fear of not ‘sharing’, or turning my back on social media. So, I decided it was time to take a serious break and shut down. This never meant my online relationships were inconsequential. It meant that I chose spending uninterrupted, focused time with my new fiancée over swapping snippets online. It meant that I’d rather be in the pool throwing my 3 kids than sitting on the sidelines with a Blackberry. It meant that actually talking to my fiancée was a more productive way to spend my time than thinking of things to say online, and hoping they were clever enough to be repeated. Just to be clear, I’m not suggesting a complete abandonment of social media. I’m suggesting that, in my case, it was time to walk away and get a better handle on it. It was time for me to devote my life to my immediate network, not just my extended network. It was time for me to justify the time I spent, in all aspects of my personal and professional life, with results. Here are 10 things I learned during my social media break. People in my extended network understood my need to focus on my immediate network more than I thought. They didn’t take it personally. My immediate network noticed I was paying attention to them much more. I would touch base with my online friends in other ways that were much more personal. People from my extended network reached out and became what I would consider real life friends. When I would check back in online, not much changed. Many of the same people were saying the same things. The extra time I now have improved my quality of life. Social media was very much an all or none proposition for me. If I wasn’t doing it actively, part-time participation lacked interest (excluding my desire to make sure friends are well). I came away with a much better concept of how to manage my time, and what it should be devoted to. My driving improved greatly. My closest relationships became closer, and new relationships flourished, while my extended relationships remained pretty much the same. I very much wonder how may other people have felt out of control with their social media usage. Have you ever wanted to just walk away from it and take a break? Do you feel I was incorrect in handling it the way I did? Is there anything you’d like to know about how it has changed my outlook? Please feel free to share your story, or ask questions, in the comments below. I’d love to hear what you have to say. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . When to Take a Social Media
Google Buzz Comments Are Collapsible Now
Finally, Google has addressed one of the Buzz kills we mentioned a long time ago – making buzz posts with tons of comments collapsible. According to Google when there are enough comments on Buzz posts, these may be collapsed based on the following details: 3 or more previous or new comments are collapsed into a group latest previous comment (from before the last visit) was left expanded for more context last two new comments (since last visit) are expanded to give a taste of ongoing conversation that you might find interesting previous and new comments are collapsed together into a single line to save space names of some of the people whose comments are collapsed are displayed to give you a chance to dive into the conversation if you it interesting All in all, these changes limit the space a post takes up in the Google Buzz tab and prevent popular posts which you might find not interesting at all from dominating your Buzz stream. Of course, the ultimate effect would be making Google Buzz a little less noisy. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Google Buzz Comments Are Collapsible
How Do You Un-Clutter Your Twitter Stream?
Let’s face it, the more people you follow, the more challenging it gets to notice all important updates on Twitter. To me, following fewer people is not an option because I think this is anti-social. I follow back every single Twitter profile that seems valid and is related to one of the topics I love (like search, social media, blogging, etc). This way, as of today, I am close to following 3300 people which makes it really hard to really “follow” what everyone says. The clutter is enormous. All of my Twitter friends (as well as myself) retweet each other multiple times which makes the clutter even heavier. So how do you make sure you are properly updated of news coming from your Twitter friends? I am aware of two tools that seem cool for that ( please add yours in the comments! ). Cadmus Cadmus is the web based tool that claims to group your friends’ Tweets to help you focus on what’s important. I do wish it had some desktop application but the online version works pretty well to make it worth having the site bookmarked and checking it a few times a day. Each unique entry has “Related” tweets section containing similar conversations (those containing similar keywords). So if you get interested in more details, you can click on “Related posts” link: Here’s my stats for example: Cadmus has analyzed 108,411 of your updates and grouped 32,892 related ones, around 30% of all your updates. Another great feature is “Personal trending topics” which are like the trending topics in Twitter but it is just from the people you follow. This seemed like a great way to find out what your friends are buzzing about. ReadTwit ReadTwit , the tool I previously covered , allows to subscribe to your friends’ updates using Google Reader. The best thing about the tool is that it: Filters repeated links in ReTweets; Allows to exclude any user or hashtag from your feed (I wish there were also an option to follow only selected users). So how do you manage to keep an eye on what your friends are tweeting about? Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . How Do You Un-Clutter Your Twitter