50 Ways to FAIL On Twitter
December 26, 2010 by TweetWonder
Filed under Twitter Marketing Tips
Like many others, I scoffed at Twitter when I first heard of it. What use could sending small messages to people I don’t know be? The mental leap from IM and Facebook status updates to Twitter makes it simpler, but business use seemed pointless at first. As I noticed more of my Search, Social and PR industry peers using Twitter, it seemed a excellent thought to test out.
While I don’t have a million followers, or even 100,000, I’ve found out that for my purposes, quality is the key and the 13k or so followers I am lucky to be associated with are appreciated a lot more. Being strategically useful and helpful builds trust, attracts influential followers (vs bots and spammers) and results in a new channel for social networking. Individual tweets may or may not be useful, but when you add them up over time, a larger picture emerges.
Twitter Marketing tips are not hard to come by. Ease of use combined with the overall ease of publishing online makes available more than enough advice on using Twitter as a consumer as well as for brand monitoring, marketing, customer service, real-time search, competitive intelligence and even direct sales.
Yes, there’s plenty of advice on what you should do with Twitter, but based on increasing mis-behaviors, there are many ways to fail. Below is a list of 10 “Don’ts” on Twitter from me, followed by 40 more provided by the smart Tweeple who responded on Twitter :
- Don’t auto answer follows with a link to your free piece of crap ebook. This sentiment is shared several times below.
- Don’t provide an obscure description of who you are and what you do
- No photo or an image that only makes sense to you and your imaginary friends
- Don’t mention a fantastic resource with no link
- Not customizing your background
- Don’t post 10 messages in succession (also repeated below)
- Don’t follow over 1000 people in a 2 hour period
- Don’t write about the cat/hamster/potted plant over and over again
- Don’t swear often and expect business people to take you seriously (Unless you work for Outspoken Media)
- Don’t over-abbreviate.
Lee Odden – Online Marketing Blog
Thanks for the cool tips. Its fantastic to find excellent blogs out there that I haven’t seen. I just recommend not having so many ad popups from those word hyperlinks. 😉 Blessings.