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How to Build a Community of Twitter Followers for Your Company

 

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twitterI've been getting this question more and more lately, as Twitter becomes more and more mainstream and the business benefits of Twitter are more and more talked about.

First, a word of caution. When engaging in any social media, you want to do so authentically - it will involve a fair amount of your participation, both give and take. Your first step once you join Twitter should probably not be to go follow 1,000 people. First of all, you very possibly might not be able to due to recent limits set by Twitter. This act seems kind of spammy, and that's the last thing you want to do in social media. You should aim to let your community grow organically. That said, there are a few things you can do to get started.

The first thing you absolutely have to do once you sign up for a Twitter account (though you can do this before signing up for Twitter, but you won't be able to do much beyond this), is start monitoring who and what people are saying about your company. Go to Search.Twitter or Tweetscan (it may be worth it to use both, or even additional Twitter search engines, as they don't all pick up on everything) and search for your company name, your executives' names, perhaps your competitors' names. You'll see all the recent tweets that mention that name or phrase. What's also great about these services is you can subscribe by RSS to this thread so you'll be able to keep tabs on new posts about your company. When someone does talk about your company - respond, favorite the tweet perhaps if it's favorable, and start following the person.

A very close second most important thing to do once you're on Twitter is to actually engage in the Twitter community. If you want people to follow you, you need to give them a reason to. Post interesting tweets, respond to others (see first point above). As noted in my word of caution, you want to be an authentic participant in the community. One of the wonderful things about Twitter is that you have to opt-in to receive someone's updates (follow them). So, you need to think of ways to warrant a follow. I've been pretty impressed with Whole Foods in this regard. I started following them, though I'm no Whole Foods nut, because of their interesting tweets like "TOTD" (tweet of the day), and interesting food-related tweets like plugging food festivals across the country.

Those are really the two most important things you can do on Twitter. But, if you're still interested in ramping up your Twitter following, here are a few additional ideas:

  • Go back to Search.Twitter and search on more general phrases that relate to the audience you're trying to reach. Subscribe to those updates and respond/follow as appropriate.
  • Check out the directories, like Twellow. Twellow is a directory of Twitter users categorized by industry or interest. There are a few other cool services, like Twubble and Twits Like Me. ReadWriteWeb posted a great article on these services here.
  • Follow those who follow you. People like to feel like you're listening to them and that they're engaging in a two-way conversation with you. A follow-back is a great way to set that environment.
  • Check out who your followers are following. They are likely interested in similar topics, and are a natural extenstion to your existing network.

One more thought to consider before you get going: Will you be setting up a company Twitter account or will various employees have personal Twitter accounts (or both)? At HubSpot, we recently launched our company Twitter account @hubspot that a few of us monitor and update. There are also a bunch of us who have our own personal accounts, including our CEO, CSA, VP Marketing, and lots of others from across the company, including myself of course. The question is which brand you are building up - your corporate brand, or your personal brand (which in turn contributes to the company brand as well). I like the mix of both, though a lot of marketers may not have the bandwith to support more than one Twitter account. Either way, the first thing you must do after reading this post is to reserve your company's name on Twitter before someone else does.

If you want to see some companies out there who are doing a great job on Twitter, check out Zappos or Whole Foods. If you want to see a full list of companies on Twitter, check out the new Social Brand Index (and it wouldn't hurt to get listed there, too, while you're at it).

Have you had any luck building a following for your company on Twitter? Do you have any additional techniques that worked for you? What have you learned from other companies on Twitter - good and bad approaches? Leave a comment and let's discuss.

intro-to-twitter-ebook

Posted by Ellie Mirman on Mon, Aug 18, 2008 @ 08:15 AM

COMMENTS

For some corporations; great idea here. Still, the "guru" quick money people need to go away. I'm all for targeted marketing, but those phony get rich rich folks need to get a real life. They are hurting the efforts of marketers that are doing a good job.

posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 8:51 AM by Lee Bautista


Nice post Ellie. I agree that my first 2 weeks on Twitter were the most useless waste of time. But once I engaged in the community and had people follow me and I followed some interesting people, all that changed. Now I regularly check and use Twitter for all sorts of things, and it has led to PR, sales and leads for HubSpot. 
 
http://www.Twitter.com/mvolpe

posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 9:16 AM by Mike Volpe


Great post! Thanks for the helpful tip!

posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 9:16 AM by Alberto Cespedes


An issue I am coming across is getting my co-coworkers / sales reps to 'get with the times' and start twittering.

posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 2:11 PM by Victoria


On having personal accounts and a company account, do you posts the same content on each? For example, a blog post update to each account? Or do you keep them separate?

posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 6:31 PM by Laura Koether


Thanks everyone, for all the comments. 
 
@Bernie - With you there! There are a few thresholds, I think, that twitter users go through as they use the service more and more. Luckily there are a lot of great third-party tools out there (twhirl has become a necessary app for me) that really make staying in touch on twitter a lot easier. 
 
@Victoria - I've seen a lot of resistance too, even internally here at HubSpot. The joke (though true) is that the first week (or two or four) every user thinks twitter is incredibly stupid. But once you start to really engage, there is a lot of benefit to be had, especially for marketers. At HubSpot we've had a lot of success on twitter in terms of engaging with media (that includes bloggers) that has resulted in some significant coverage. As more and more companies, and consumers, move to twitter, I think the benefits to businesses will be that much harder to ignore. 
 
@Laura I try to keep the two different. Imagine someone who follows both your personal account as well as your corporate account - you don't want them to receive the same exact messages twice every time. But, that said, it's certainly fine to pull in blog posts to both accounts. We do that here, too. We have our twitter account automatically pull in our recent blog posts. But we also supplement that with additional tweets, responses, etc. Personally, I also use my personal account to tweet other notes about my life, whereas I wouldn't really do that with our HubSpot account.

posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 7:15 PM by Ellie Mirman


Great article Ellie. For those interested in further reading on the topic, Wired Magazine had a good article about this stuff this week: http://www.wired.com/culture/lifestyle/magazine/16-08/howto_selfpromote 
 
One piece of advice in the Wired article was not to sell too hard on Twitter -- engage in the dialog and become a thought leader...don't bludgeon the community with marketing messages.

posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 11:16 PM by Brian Halligan


I took a look and in the last 30 days, HubSpot has gotten 507 visitors to its properties through Twitter. Not a bad start.  
 
Many of the folks who follow our team members and company on Twitter are folks interested in internet marketing, so those are relatively high quality visits I suspect.

posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 11:28 PM by Brian Halligan


A word to our readers - Brian, our CEO (above), was one of the biggest skeptics of twitter. But after trying it out, sticking with it, and seeing the data, he's become a true convert. So, there is hope for the skeptic CEOs out there.

posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 11:33 PM by Ellie Mirman


Excellent article here. I have twitter and I haven;t really utilized its potential marketing power. Got some ideas after read this post :) 
 
Thanks!

posted on Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 1:53 AM by may


Great post! Really useful! 
But how would you get started if you were an early-stage start up and nobody is talking about you? How do you join the conversations? 
Anyway, the first thing I did was reserving my company´s name.  
Thanks again

posted on Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 5:41 AM by Vicente


I am an avid Twitter user and my involvement with Twitter has led to a direct growth in our website traffic and to closed business. I would just add one helpful hint to your great post.  
 
 
 
While it is a great idea to follow those who follow you...make sure you check their profile first. Like anything else online...there are spammers on Twitter. You can usually tell at a glance at their tweets or even their profile name whether they are a legit user or not.

posted on Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 10:36 AM by Eric Guerin


Good advice, I have posted the link to it to my twitter followers! They've wrote me back telling me that it was a good article, so that's good to hear!  
 
Go Media users it's official twitter account to help answer design related questions from our followers and of course to promote new things we're doing.  
 
It's still an experiment though to see what else we can do with Twitter. We might do interviews over Twitter - what do you think of that?

posted on Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 1:13 PM by Jeff Finley


@Vicente - Look for people of common interests and start following and interacting with them. The conversations don't have to be (and shouldn't be) just about your company, it should be more than that. This is a great start to building relationships with people and getting known in your community.

posted on Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 4:19 PM by Ellie Mirman


@Jeff - Sounds like a cool idea to try out. Marketing is all about experimentation, so give it a shot! Note the benefit and drawback is that other people will be able to jump into the conversation.

posted on Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 4:20 PM by Ellie Mirman


Great article! I was very skeptical of Twitter but after a week of using it (have 2 accounts, 1 personal, 1 business) I'm a total convert. I'm a solopreneur with limited time and marketing budget, so it's great that one free tool enables me to both keep up with the latest in my industry (B2B, B2G marketing & PR), market to it, and network with those in it. I've already seen an uptick in traffic to my website through link on Twitter profile. Keep up the great work! 
 
Twitter: B2B_MarketingPR

posted on Wednesday, August 20, 2008 at 10:09 AM by Kim Cornwall Malseed


I'm in need of advice on how best to market my website. The learning curve seems to be very steep with it comes to marketing online. Any help greatly apprecited. Thanks.

posted on Sunday, August 24, 2008 at 10:39 PM by JDG


@JDG A great first place to start is www.WebsiteGrader.com - you can get a free custom report for your website detailing tips to improve its marketing effectiveness. There's a lot of great content out there, in blogs, social media, and such that goes over tips to marketing online. If you're looking for a product to help you out with this you can get in touch with us or you'll learn a lot just by reading the free content here. Hope this helps!

posted on Sunday, August 24, 2008 at 10:52 PM by Ellie Mirman


Thanks for the great information about using Twitter for building up your websites/companies brand name and 'getting the word out'. I have just started using Twitter for my business and while I haven't realized any increase in traffic at the moment, these things do take time. Thanks again for the links to the great resources such as the twitter directories and search engines for finding friends and contacts.

posted on Monday, September 08, 2008 at 10:17 PM by Todd Daniels


Great article! I have just started using twitter.  
 
http://twitter.com/herbsandmore 
 

posted on Friday, April 10, 2009 at 7:14 AM by Dee


new recording artist using these and will have over 400,000 in less then 30 days!  
http://tweetergetter.com/theyoungdread  
 
http://twitteringfortraffic.com/theyoungdread  
 
http://tweetpenguin.com/theyoungdread  
(only use if you are wanting massive followers)

posted on Tuesday, April 21, 2009 at 9:45 PM by jason c. eubanks


new recording artist using these and will have over 400,000 in less then 30 days!  
http://tweetergetter.com/theyoungdread  
 
http://twitteringfortraffic.com/theyoungdread  
 
http://tweetpenguin.com/theyoungdread  
(only use if you are wanting massive followers)

posted on Tuesday, April 21, 2009 at 9:46 PM by jason c. eubanks


Very useful tips and tricks you have posted there. 
 
Thanks very much.

posted on Sunday, April 26, 2009 at 6:03 PM by twitter loco


So Twitter is awesome for Taking traffic to you website . It is very 
simple to setup and its a fun positive way to keep in contact with 
people. To get more followers on twitter check out this amazing 
tool.Twitter Traffic Machine 

posted on Thursday, April 30, 2009 at 11:54 AM by JONA


So Twitter is awesome for Taking traffic to you website . It is very 
 
simple to setup and its a fun positive way to keep in contact with 
 
people. To get more followers on twitter check out this amazing 
 
tool. 
 
Twitter 
 
Traffic Machine

posted on Thursday, April 30, 2009 at 1:20 PM by twituser


I loved the tips you gave . Wht i want to know is how do i use twitter for my companies bussiness. We are a small company into SEO services , web designing and internet marketing .Pls advice and also how do i increase the followers keeping the interest of my company in mind . Thanx

posted on Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 12:31 AM by kamin


Comments have been closed for this article.