I love me some Twitter.
But alas, there are many newbies who are using Twitter the wrong way to promote “stuff”. These users actually lower the value to all other Twitter users by being of low value and generally being a nuisance by adding irrelevant “noise” to the Twitter feed.
Eventually, these accounts will be permanently blocked by Twitter users, removed by Twitter if a spammer account is reported and flagged by 3rd party spam busters like TwitChuck.
Now I suspect that a lot of these users are not really hardcore spammers (although there are those too). But rather, people who don’t understand how Twitter works and have no empathy for the people who mutually follow them.
If you want to promote your business or product on Twitter, here are some guidelines on how to do it professionally and ethically:
1. Age of your account.
Do not promote any business or product unless your account is at least 6 months old. Additionally, you should only promote a product that is relevant to your followers. Which brings us to rule 2.2. Build a target audience per Twitter account.
You should follow and friend users with similar interests. You should build up goodwill by offering useful content that is relevant to the product you are promoting. Use a separate Twitter account if you are involved in more than 1 market niche.3. Have a balanced ratio of friends and followers (unless you are a mega celebrity).
Spammers tend to use software scripts or robots to add thousands of followers in the hope that they will follow back. If their Tweets have no value, many people will “Unfollow” them leaving an unbalanced ratio of friends and followers. Meaning, the number of people they follow is significantly more than the number of people who follow them.4. Join the conversation.
Another self-centered strategy that spammers use is to just have a few posts about their product or service and then just focus on adding friends and followers instead of actually joining the conversation. Communicate. Retweet good tweets (see my post on How to Retweet Like a Pro). Reply to direct messages. Join conversations using the #tag. Mention others in your tweets.5. Avoid the hard sell terms
Don’t use a lot of spam terms like “free”, “join”, “subscribe”, “viagra”…etc. These will get flagged.
Check your Twitter account on Twitchuck to see how you stand. Here’s an example of your report:
You May Also Like These Related Posts:
- Twitter – How To Auto-Reply And Auto Follow
- How To Use Twitter Lists
- Twitter Crash Course: How to “Retweet” Like a Pro
- How to Create Pre-Written “ReTweets” for Twitter
- My Twitter Drive
Tags: brian wong, marketing, social media, twitchuck, twitter







Leave A Reply (7 comments So Far)
K.L. Horne
926 days ago
Worth reading!
Brian Wong
926 days ago
Thanks for reading :)
whatawebsite
926 days ago
Hi Brian,
5 good points and a fun tool at Twitchuck ….
where sadly I only scored 77 !
Like your blog by the way
Best wishes from Hamburg
Will
Brian Wong
925 days ago
Hi Will,
Thanks for dropping by. I am glad you found value from the post and
the tool.
The 5 pointers are a great way to remodel your approach and soon
increase your score!
Cheers,
Brian
Underground Training Club
924 days ago
Great read and thanks for your input! I just never saw the value in Twitter..I did until all the spammers came along then pretty much stopped using it.
In terms of your experience, do you still see it as a way to generate income or Twitter should be used more for brand awareness and company updates? Any thoughts on this?
Underground Training Club
924 days ago
Great read and thanks for your input! I just never saw the value in Twitter..I did until all the spammers came along then pretty much stopped using it.
In terms of your experience, do you still see it as a way to generate income or Twitter should be used more for brand awareness and company updates? Any thoughts on this?
Brian Wong
924 days ago
I don't see Twitter as a stand-alone money making tool. There are some
who do it but it will put their followers off. I would recommend
against any direct promotions of products or services unless you are
only after the short term gain.
I see Twitter as an important communication tool. And it will only
become more and more important in the future as more website integrate
directly with the Twitter API.
It can build your brand, give you mass feedback and drive a lot of
traffic to your online properties. In that sense, it is a very
powerful money making tool but it must be used with a long-term view
together with your other business assets.
Regardless, it is definitely worth the time to use Twitter and to
start building a solid following based on mutual respect and you
should definitely strive to add value to your Twitter followers.