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Category: Twitter

0 5 Ways Brands are Tone-Deaf on Twitter

  • March 25, 2013
  • Blab It Canada
  • · News · Twitter
Tonedeaftwit

As Twitter increasingly becomes an important tool for brands and their social media strategy it is also increasingly clear that many brands don’t “get” how to optimize their Twitter time.

Seven years after Twitter launched and more than two years since it started to become widely used by businesses and organizations it is still not uncommon to see these Twitter accounts making mistakes. These errors cost them followers, poor reputations and, ultimately, business.

So what are brands doing wrong? Let me count the ways ….

5 Ways Brands are Tone-Deaf on Twitter (and ways they could do things better)

1. Talk too much about themselves: Seems obvious, right? But some brands seem to think that talking about themselves and their products and services is somehow helpful. Even brands who limit this kind of talk to 25 percent of the time are taking a risk and likely getting fewer followers than they could. Better idea: Do a daily or weekly check to see if brand messages are 10 percent or less of the conversation. If not, make it so.

2. Inviting people to connect: The word connection implies a two-way activity and yet most brands that invite people to connect really mean “follow us” because they won’t follow back. Better idea: Say “Follow us” and give people an idea what might be in it for them.

3. Using auto-respond DMs: A direct message (DM) back from a brand implies a form of engagement. And yet more often than not responding to that DM is impossible because the brand has not yet (or may never) follow back. Better idea: Never use auto DMs and go out of your way to follow back many of your followers and get to know them.

4. Not responding to @ messages: If your brand is on Twitter and people talk to you with an @ message you need to respond. Would your brand ignore a phone call or an email from a customer? Better idea: Have whoever manages social set aside time each day to do nothing but respond on various social networks including Twitter (even a simple “thank you” is better than nothing).

5. Allowing anyone to follow the brand account: In their hunger to have more followers some brands allow just about anyone to follow them. If you want to assess a brand’s attitude to Twitter look at who follows the brand. Find too many spammy, porn, “take-this-deal” or incomplete accounts and you know they care more about numbers than people. Better idea: Have your account manager block inappropriate followers.

So, what do you think? Are there other things you’ve seen brands do on Twitter that make you wonder why they’re really there?

Source: Social Media Today

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0 Tweets Shrink Again for Marketers

  • March 15, 2013
  • Blab It Canada
  • · News · Twitter
Twitter_Wallpaper__yvt2

As if 140 characters weren’t enough, Twitter decreased the amount of space marketers can use in tweets yet again. After Twitter updated its link wrapping code last month, marketers tweeting out a link would find themselves two characters short.

The change trimmed down tweets including condensed links. Normally, links in tweets take up 20 characters, leaving the extra 120 for commentary. But with the introduction of Twitter’s new link wrapping code, only 118 characters were left for tagging or introducing content.

If you think 118 characters are steep, tweets are shrinking even more. According to the Wall Street Journal, a new Federal Trade Commission decision requires tweets containing “short-form ads” will be held to the same requirements as other ads. That means tweets containing links to a product will be considered ads, and they will have to include a disclaimer identifying the tweet as an advertisement.

While normal tweeters believe they won’t have to be concerned with this, the FTC said even mentioning successful results from a weight loss product could be considered an advertisement.

This severely limits valuable space online marketing companies need for promoting brands. While it’s understandable that all advertisements should be treated as such, it’s also crippling to advertisers. The amount of space it takes to label a tweet as an ad diminishes the amount of space a marketer needs to introduce the product. The FTC said disclosures should be unmistakably clear. It suggested preceding posts with “Ad:” or tagging tweets with “#sponsored.” But takes up valuable space, especially when including links.

Not only that, but what consumer wants to read a tweet that outwardly says it’s an ad? Not me.

So what’s a marketer to do?

First, marketers should reword tweets so they are not necessarily promoting a specific product. The Wall Street Journal said, “If a company can’t find a way to make it’s disclosure fit the constraints of a social of mobile ad, it needs to change the ad copy so that it doesn’t require a disclosure.”

In the interest of promoting advertising, Twitter should sell its own ad space with more characters. An online marketing company would be more likely to pay for ads directly through Twitter if they allowed ads to be posted with a few more characters. Characters used for disclosure labels should not be subtracted from the original 140-character limit. This would boost Twitter’s revenue and give marketers a better chance at promoting their brands.

Source: Social Media Today

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0 Twitter Hackers Claim Another Victim, Donald Trump

  • February 21, 2013
  • Blab It Canada
  • · News · Twitter
Trump2

Donald Trump is the latest high-profile victim of a Twitter hack job. Just before noon EST on Thursday, Trump’s account, @realDonaldTrump, tweeted a line from Will.I.Am’s “Scream & Shout (Remix).” The lyrics in question come from Lil’ Wayne‘s verse in the song.

The tweet was retweeted nearly 1,000 times in just a few minutes before it was deleted. About 15 minutes later, Trump’s account tweeted the following explanation.

Trump2

 

Hacked Twitter accounts have been popping up all week, in hilarious fashion, starting on Monday with Burger King’s account. Jeep was the next victim on Tuesday morning. The hacking had been getting so much attention, MTV and BET pretended to hack each other’s accounts as a publicity stunt.

There’s no specific information on exactly how Trump’s people will go about “looking for the perpetrators.”

Via: Mashable

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1 Jeep Becomes Latest Victim of Twitter Hack Attack

  • February 20, 2013
  • Blab It Canada
  • · News · Twitter
jeep-twitter

Yet another major Twitter account—@Jeep—has been hacked, raising major concerns about the rising hacker threat and privacy protection.

Jeep’s profile page was changed to show a Cadillac logo, with first tweet reading: “WELCOME BACK CADILLAC #300.”

In a series of Tweets and photos, the temporary hacker management of Jeep’s account said that the company was sold to Cadillac because its employees and CEO were using drugs. Its bio was changed to “The official Twitter handle for the Jeep — Just Empty Every Pocket, sold to Cadillac… In a hood near you!”

After a slew of racial epithets, Cadillac quickly distanced itself, tweeting, “Just to clarify, Cadillac is not connected to the hack of the @Jeep Twitter account.” And after alerting Twitter, the company seems to have regained control of its account, with the offending Tweets taken down.

A short time later, MTV’s Twitter account appeared to be hacked, but it turned out to be a publicity stunt by the company.

Who did it?

The hacked Jeep account sent a tweet addressing two hacker groups, LulzSec and Anonymous, so they’re expected to have some connection. And there’s some speculation that a New England DJ was responsible.

The @Jeep hack attack comes as Apple announced some of its computers were victim to the same hackers that attacked Facebook.

(Read More: Apple Says It Was Hit by Malware.)

And just 24 hours ago @BurgerKing’s Twitter account was hacked by what looks like could be the same hacker. In the 71 minutes that Burger King was hacked, 53 tweets were sent with a total of 73,421 retweets. Burger King addressed the issue, saying “Interesting day here at Burger King, but we’re back! Welcome to all our new followers. Hope you all stick around!”

(Read More: Burger King Takes Down Twitter Account After Hack Attack.)

What happened?

These kind of hacks could have happened by something as simple as resetting a compromised email account. This appears to be a problem with the security of the accounts—a web issue—and not a problem Twitter is directly responsible for.

At the beginning of the month, Twitter reported that hackers gained access to its internal information and compromised 250,000 accounts. Twitter reset passwords for those accounts, and urged “all users to take this opportunity to ensure that they are following good password hygine, on Twitter and elsewhere on the Internet.”

(Read More: Who’s Hacking the US? Signs Point to China.)

Twitter said it doesn’t comment on individual accounts. The company has made a big push to help users strengthen their passwords. It has automatic tools and employees who constantly monitor for hack attacks, and has people on staff who are focused on ways to improve security and educate users about best practices. Twitter works with brands and individuals to go over password best-practices and guidelines, but if this kind of high-profile hack continues, they may have to do more.

Via: CNBC

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0 How Super Bowl XLVII changed real time marketing

  • February 5, 2013
  • Blab It Canada
  • · Social Media · Twitter

Reblogged from PandoDaily:

Click to visit the original post

Twitter got real this super bowl. I’m not talking, "Whoa tons of Super Bowl ads used hashtags!” but a revolution of real time marketing.

And until Sunday’s Super Bowl game and blackout, “real time” was pretty much just another overhyped fad to most, an empty buzzword. But this game was a turning point, a pivotal application of real real time by some of the biggest brands in the world.

Read more… 673 more words

What did you do during the Super Bowl Blackout?

0 Twitter debuts new video-sharing app Vine

  • January 24, 2013
  • Blab It Canada
  • · Twitter

Twitter debuted Vine on Thursday, a new video-sharing app that lets users share short, six-second clips of video in the iOS app.

Twitter introduced Vine on Thursday morning, following a day of speculation about the company’s intentions with video after CEO Dick Costolo shared a videocreated through the video startup. Twitter announced that Vine will remain a separate app rather than building it into Twitter’s functionality like the company’s version of photo-editing that competes with Instagram.

The new Vine app will let users send six-second looped videos, keeping the length short (much like the amount of text allowed in a tweet.)

Click here to read the full press release from Eliza Kern

 

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0 An Open Letter to Ann Coulter

  • October 24, 2012
  • Blab It Canada
  • · Social Media · Twitter

Reblogged from The World of Special Olympics:

Click to visit the original post

The following is a guest post in the form of an open letter from Special Olympics athlete and global messenger John Franklin Stephens to Ann Coulter after this tweet during last night's Presidential debate.

Dear Ann Coulter,

Come on Ms. Coulter, you aren’t dumb and you aren’t shallow.  So why are you continually using a word like the R-word as an insult?

Read more… 353 more words

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