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Archive for the ‘Twitter’ Category

Retweeting negative comments

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Boloco, a regional chain of offering “inspired burritos and smoothies,” shared a useful social media tactic with David Gerzof’s social media class @ Emerson College today. As reported by Jeannie Hannigan and Matt Karolian on Twitter through the #ESM hashtag, Boloco retweets negative tweets about their brand to galvanize fans to respond on their behalf.

Advantages of the tactic:
*The fan base responses on your behalf adding credibility
*RTing negative & positive enhances the accounts builds trust by demonstrating objectivity

Disadvantages of the tactics:
*Some negative feedback requires an official response from the brand directly
*Followers unaware of the greater context for the comment may only take away the negative details

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March 16th, 2010 written by Zach Braiker
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Balanced Approachability on Twitter

Let us go then, you and I, to the Twitter accounts of the top brands. Before we do, I’m going to make a prediction: the majority of their tweets will be @ replies. That’s interesting for several reasons. First, it signifies that they are using Twitter to engage with their customer base by responding to their questions, suggestions and comments. Second, it indicates a neglect of what their followers find compelling.

It’s uninteresting to follow a company I care about and only read their replies to their customers. I’m going to generalize and say that we follow companies because we like their products and services, we want discounts, special access to promotions, to get closer to a world view we share as well as a response to our questions.

If the majority of a company’s responses are @ replies, it signifies a company is listening. However, listening alone is not compelling, especially if a company’s responses are not directed at you.

Check it out for yourself. Go to these Twitter accounts and see:

Starbucks Coffee (Starbucks) on Twitter

@Starbucks
@JetBlue
@Wholefoods

There is another side to this discussion. If we think of the brand as a person and Twitter its voice, the account consisting of a majority of @ replies is approachable. Customers feel that can ask a question and receive a response, evidenced by the account’s activity. It communicates something real about the brand.

I am in favor of a balanced approachability strategy that signifies you are listening, while also providing engaging content. We track the ratio of @ replies in our tweet stream for clients as a metric that helps us navigate this.

Have you met Tuesdays

Join the conversation on our Fan PageJoin the conversation on our Fan Page

This semester I’m teaching a course at Emerson College in Boston entitled Social Media and Marketing. If this topic interests you, there are many ways you can participate. The easiest is joining our Facebook fan page, “Why Social Media Matters.” My goal is to contribute to meaningful discourse about the role of social media in our lives and our businesses. Feel free to drop on by and stay for a while. I’m going to blog quite frequently about it as well.

One of the things I love about social media is how simple it can be. Sure, you can make social media complex. You can measure metrics, use social marketing models and chart the growth of communities over time. However, you can also create one powerful idea. An idea that doesn’t require anything but others willing to play along.

Take the idea of Follow Friday for example. Hundreds of thousands participate weekly in nominating their friends to be followed on Twitter. The concept is simple, and the participation is contagious. To play, you just need a Twitter account. What if we applied the concept of Follow Friday to our lives? Maybe we’d call it “Have you met” Tuesdays. And we would share the great people we know with others we cared about.

Why does social media matter to you?

A Twitter Focus Group for your Marketing Department

advanced twitter search

So much is made of Twitter as a platform for conversation, it’s powerful search qualities are often overlooked.

Twitter provides marketers with the ability to micro-target based on geography, keywords and phrases, subjects referenced, content and even sentiment shared.

The increased ability to search necessitates a deeper understanding of your target audience. It also enables marketers to create an ongoing focus group to obtain it.

Use search.twitter.com, wefollow.com and other tools to find your brand’s target consumers.

If you follow 100 people from your target audience, you’ll notice trends. You’ll see who your target audience really is, what they read, think and share.

Your ability to market to them will greatly improve, too. You’ll stop seeing them as just statistics and more as real people.

June 30th, 2009 written by Zach Braiker
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The Psychology of Lines

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If you work in midtown Manhattan, you’re likely to know the food cart I’m talking about. It’s the one on 53rd and 6th with 30 people waiting in line. They’re waiting to eat middle eastern food sold from a cart the size of a mini-copper. And they wait at all hours. When I passed by at 10 pm at least 50 people were in line. When I asked them if the food was “that good” to merit the line, they responded, “well, I saw the line, so it must be.”

I believe the same psychology of lines applies to Twitter. So often people use following / follower ratio to determine who they want to follow before actually “trying the food.”

There are many ways to cause lines to form, yet far fewer to cook a great meal.

June 16th, 2009 written by Zach Braiker
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Zach Braiker

This blog analyzes where social media culture and business converge. Zach Braiker is the CEO of Refine & Focus a social media agency and an adjunct professor of social media at Emerson College.

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