Last night we held a private social media course in Maryland. It was a great time and we met a lot of enthusiastic and anxious people ready to jump into the social media realm. As we find most often when we speak, the bulk of the questions were about Twitter. If you haven’t really grasped the notion of Twitter or if you’re using it, but not sure if you are doing the right things, I hope taking a look at what NOT to do will answer some questions.
What not to do #1: Hit people over the head with sales messages.
We all know when someone is trying to hard sell us in person and we don’t appreciate it. The same rules apply with Twitter. You wouldn’t (we hope) walk up to someone off the street and start giving them a hard sales pitch, so don’t do it on Twitter. People are not on Twitter to get an advertising message. They want to share information, communicate about mutual interests, network with others, and share their ideas. Seek first to listen to the conversations and build real relationships in these communities. Offer up content that has VALUE to your audience. People will appreciate and pay attention to content driven posts. Your sales-y posts will just get ignored and in some cases blocked.
What not to do #2: Act like a robot.
People want to communicate with other people in a sincere fashion. Your automated direct welcome message is going to do nothing. People know it was automated. Often times, this is combined with #1 and the auto message is a hard sales pitch. Don’t do it! Likewise, I understand the ease at which applications allow Twitter, Linked In and Facebook to be connected, but use this will caution. Twitter posts automatically sent to post to Facebook can be extremely annoying. Each social media portal should be treated as separate entities. There is no doubt there are times when it is appropriate to post the same thing everywhere, but not every time.
What not to do #3: Stress over follower counts.
It is easy to get caught up in counting numbers, but don’t stress over it. Don’t ask for followers or freak out when you lose a couple. Instead, focus on the people that are your followers (no matter how small that number is). Quality always wins over quantity. Also, focus your attention on your content. If the content is relevant and interesting, you will gain followers naturally.
What not to do #4: Broadcasting over communicating.
Now you may think this sounds a little counter-intuitive being I just told you to broadcast your relevant content. Let me explain. Yes, content is a MUST and you are broadcasting that information. However, communication is MORE of a must. Take the time to Retweet something that someone posted. Use your tweets to promote others and ask questions. You want your content to be there, but relationship building must be present as well. With all of social media, you give in order to get.





