Should you or shouldn't you - be on Twitter?
This white paper summarizes Twitter usage patterns, business use case examples, and three ingredients for Twitter success.
It may help you make a more informed and prepared decision about HOW to get started with Twitter for Business.
2. Test Tube Twitter
For the past three semesters I persuaded, coaxed and begged some 50 digital
marketing students to start using Twitter – just do it! About 10% made an earnest
attempt and remarked that they were really getting the swing of it. Then the course
ended, and poof! they disappeared into Ethernet air.
Twitter (www.twitter.com) is the micro-blogging, social media-hyped, information
superhighway broadcast tool that is now used by a measly 1.45% of the Canadian
Internet population (some 350,000 people) [1]. In contrast, 19% of Americans tweet
representing about 55% (19 million) of the 45 million worldwide Twitter users [2].
Believe it or not, 72% of Twitter users joined in the first five months of 2009. And
the majority of broadcast posts (90% of all tweets) were from a small 10% minority
of prolific users, while just 1% use Twitter more than once a week [3]. Twitter
quitters are the more than 60% of U.S. Twitter users who fail to return the following
month after signing up [4].
Twitter remains in its infancy of adoption in Canada, with its usage both
sporadic and concentrated among a small group of active, enthusiastic users. It
seems that the digital marketing students were representing well – for better or for
worse.
Experiments and Results
None of these statistics though necessarily detract from those businesses and
individuals who are thriving while experimenting with the Twitterati. Companies
touted as having made the best use of Twitter include some major brands like
@DellOutlet, who attributes US$3 million dollars in converted sales through their
Twitter account. Others include @ComcastCares, @VirginAmerica, @JetBlue and
@Zappos.
Small business successes include a Korean BBQ taco truck that drives around Los
Angeles, California serving hungry followers through @KogiBBQ – they tweet
locations and times where the truck is parked. Even an exceptionally creative home-
based cake decorator from Mississauga, Ontario @CakeorDeathCA has grown her
custom cake business to be a supplier of some 300 “pill box fashioned” cakelets for
last month’s LG Fashion Week in Toronto.
Michelle Corsano, Burst Technology Marketing
3. These companies have chosen to use (um, test) Twitter - early adopters
experimenting with the broadcast site without the benefit of best practices or
measured success to guide them. For this reason alone, they deserve our attention
so that we too can learn when and how to add Twitter to the marketing mix.
Three Main Ingredients
If your company is evaluating conducting a Twitter experiment, here are some
essential ingredients to be mixed in the beaker: strategy, content and resources.
Taking a closer look at each will help you gauge your readiness and probability of
success:
Strategy
One is advised to take direction from Jeremiah Owyang [5] when he wrote,
“Successful social media marketing is 80% strategy and 20% technology.”
When considering whether or not to Tweet, step back and define the business
objectives by answering the following questions:
What are you hoping to achieve?
What measurable business results do you want?
Who is the intended audience? are they on Twitter?
How will you measure success?
Do you have, or can you acquire the necessary resources?
Companies have found many varied objectives where Twitter is having effect, while
other business use cases are emerging: whether for media relations, customer
service, sales, marketing communications broadcast, recruitment or driving traffic to
a website, blog, webinar, promotion, event or retail location. In addition, individuals
and professionals find Twitter to be a gem of a networking tool.
Michelle Corsano, Burst Technology Marketing
4. Content
The category of micro-blogging that Twitter has been labeled with is ambiguous – I
suppose the company was compelled to create a new category, but this does not
describe its core capability. Rather, Twitter is a live (real-time) communication
broadcast tool, not unlike E-mail, Instant Messaging, Telegrams or Radio broadcast
systems – mashed up and online 24/7/365.
Twitter allows you to broadcast up to 140 characters at a time, as many times as
you want, either to everyone (and anybody) or to one person or selected people.
You can also send direct messages (akin to chat) to any one person. The live nature
of Twitter is dependent on followers being signed in and attentive/alert to posts as
they are sent. As a consequence, the more frequently that you post on Twitter, and
the more content that is posted, the more chance of your intended audience actually
reading and responding to the posts. In contrast, if your followers are offline when
tweets are sent, they will most likely never read them – this is the real-time nature
of Twitter.
Content frequency and relevancy to your audience is key to success. Net,
you need a content plan for Twitter to make a dent in achieving your defined
business objectives. And content is not easy, it entails a lot of consistent, continual
effort to research, create and manage.
For this reason, Twitter is well suited to businesses that have rich content and high
frequency communications with stakeholders – whether employees, customers,
suppliers, investors, media or partners. It is not coincidental that social media smart
brands, those with an existing blogging strategy, information and media companies
and those with frequent updates are embracing Twitter. If your business is one of
those, then Twitter may be an effective broadcast channel worth experimenting with.
Michelle Corsano, Burst Technology Marketing
5. Resources
Despite Twitter being a free Web tool that is overly simple to use, there is no “free
lunch” since its going concern operation is dependent on adequate, perhaps
dedicated resources. Depending on your strategy and expected results resources
may also need to collaborate across business functions. For example,
representatives from corporate communications, customer service, marketing and
sales, to name a few, may need to provide input and content. And that requires a
communication plan and governance model to guide cross-functional efforts.
Even with first phase initiatives some amount of resource – whether internal or
external – will need to be allocated to plan and post content, as well as conduct
regular monitoring and measurement. Staffing skills, traits and pre-requisite
experience are likely to include a mix of excellent communications skills, digital
technical competency, and marketing and business acumen – not to mention project
management.
Lowest Barrier to Entry
If these strategy, content and resource issues are intimidating there is one least
common denominator use of Twitter, and that is monitoring. Even if your company
balks at Twitter or chooses a more prudent, risk averse approach you can start
using it right now to monitor and listen to what customers, media and
competitors are saying online about your company. You do not even have to open
an account or engage directly in the conversations in order to benefit from gleamed
brand, market and competitive insights.
All you have to do is search Twitter to find what may turn out to be actionable
information you can use to improve customer service, product development,
corporate communications or competitive intelligence. And while you are actively
learning by monitoring and listening online you may eventually be inspired to adopt
Twitter into your marketing mix.
Michelle Corsano is the President of Burst Technology Marketing – you can follow her
on Twitter @mcorsano. Michelle is based in Toronto, Canada.
Michelle Corsano, Burst Technology Marketing