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Tweeting to Women? Try Entertainment. Tweeting to Men? Try Opinion.

 

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If you're a successful inbound marketer, you know how generate leads online: Create content that interests and attracts your ideal customers.

If you're selling golf lessonsblog articles and videos filled with golf tips will pull potential customers into your website. The more content you create, the more people you attract; the more targeted that content is, the more the people you attract will turn into customers.

But here's a question: Once you get beyond industry-level targeting (golf content for golf academies), how do you fine-tune your targeting?

Turns out there are a lot of things you can do, particularly when it comes to Twitter. For example, research by HubSpotter Dan Zarrella shows that there is a significant difference between the type of content that woman and men share on Twitter.

If you're targeting a female audience, your content will spread more quickly if it's related to entertainment, products or instructional material. If you're targeting males, your content will do better with opinion.

Dan's research shows that a series of other factors -- time of day, number of retweets, content type and punctuation -- all have relationships with retweeting patterns. (If you're interested in retweets, Dan will be hosting a webinar on the topic this Friday.) For marketers on Twitter, an understanding of these patterns can accelerate the spread of your content across the web.

Your customers aren't on Twitter? 

Fine, but there's no question your customers are online, sharing information on some sort of social network.  As a marketer, you need to optimize your content for broadest possible distribution on social channels, regardless of the platforms you're using. Whatever network that is, you can learn from the basic lessons of sharing content on Twitter.

Live Webinar: The Science of ReTweets With Dan Zarrella

The Science Of Retweets Webinar

Join Dan Zarrella, HubSpot's Social Media Scientist and author of the Social Media Marketing Book for a 30 minute overview of the Science of ReTweets!

Date and time: Friday, March 19, 2010 at 1:00pm ET 

Reserve your spot now to learn what makes tweets contagious and how to create tweets that will go viral and increase your reach and authority..


Posted by Rick Burnes on Tue, Mar 16, 2010 @ 03:55 PM

COMMENTS

NO men responded to entertainment, products, instruction, news, or small talk? Or am I reading the graph wrong? Seems hard to believe that opinion is the ONLY thing men respond to.

posted on Tuesday, March 16, 2010 at 4:08 PM by Michael Mallory


Great stuff as always, Rick.  
 
One question about the graphic: Is the pointer-finger over the word "products" supposed to be indicative of something? ;)

posted on Tuesday, March 16, 2010 at 4:10 PM by Matt Shaw


@Matt Nope, the finger pointer was a mistake, now fixed. Thanks for, er, *pointing* it out.

posted on Tuesday, March 16, 2010 at 4:20 PM by Rick Burnes


Wow. I think I'm just going to have to go with Mark Twain here: There are lies, there are damn lies, and then there are statistics. 
 
Otherwise, I'd be in danger of expressing my opinion! 

posted on Wednesday, March 17, 2010 at 12:22 AM by Kalashnakitty


Many people use "handles" on Twitter, and their gender would only be obvious by reading their individual bios. So how was this done? And with how many Twitter accounts? It looks like pure tosh to me. Sorry!

posted on Wednesday, March 17, 2010 at 4:40 AM by @wayupnorth


Comments have been closed for this article.