twitter Archives - Wylie Communications, Inc. https://www.wyliecomm.com/tag/twitter/ Writing workshops, communication consulting and writing services Wed, 27 Dec 2023 15:59:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.wyliecomm.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/cropped-wci-favico-1-32x32.gif twitter Archives - Wylie Communications, Inc. https://www.wyliecomm.com/tag/twitter/ 32 32 65624304 What’s the best tweet length? https://www.wyliecomm.com/2022/06/tweet-length/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2022/06/tweet-length/#respond Fri, 24 Jun 2022 16:56:31 +0000 https://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=29948 Plus: What’s the best hashtag length, word length and reading grade level for Twitter?

Sure, Twitter has a 280-character limit. But just because Twitter has doubled its 140-character limit doesn’t mean you should use all of them.… Read the full article

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Plus: What’s the best hashtag length, word length and reading grade level for Twitter?

Sure, Twitter has a 280-character limit. But just because Twitter has doubled its 140-character limit doesn’t mean you should use all of them.

Tweet length
Tweet this! What’s the most effective length of a tweet that twitter users will retweet? The best character limit for a hashtag? Image by rvlsoft

So what’s the ideal length of a tweet? A hashtag? How else can you make your tweets more readable and engaging? Let’s look at the research:

1. Write long tweets.

So you’ve written your blog post, and now you want to get the word out on Twitter. How long should your tweet be? 190 characters? Longer than 140 characters?

Turns out longer tweets get most engagements, according to an analysis by Sotrender and the Chicago Tribune

Why?

Retweets, likes, replies, impressions, link clicks, and profile clicks increase with length. You’ll get more engagements if your tweets are 240-259 words, according to an analysis of tweets by the Chicago Tribune.

2. Use hashtags … but not too many.

What about hashtags? We’ve all seen people tweet 140 characters to 280 on hashtags. So how long is too long?

Let’s look at the research:

#Hashtags work … But don’t overuse them. Chart by Buffer
  • Use hashtags, according to research by Buffer Media. Tweets with hashtags get twice the engagement of tweets without them.
  • But don’t overuse them. Tweets with one or two hashtags get 21% higher engagement than those without, Buffer found. But engagement drops when you add more.
  • Make them short. Keep them to 6 characters or less, recommends Vanessa Doctor from Hashtags.org.

3. Make tweets easy to read.

Retweets on average scored 6.47 on the Flesh-Kincaid Index, according to Dan Zarrella, HubSpot’s viral marketing scientist. Random tweets scored even lower: 6.04 years on the Flesch-Kincaid Index.

Light reading Want to be retweeted? Aim for about 6.5 on the Flesch-Kincaid Index for the most retweetable tweets. Chart by Dan Zarrella

Zarrella should know. He spent nine months analyzing 5 million tweets and 40 million retweets to find what makes some messages travel the world while others just stay home on the couch.

“Easy-to-read posts are more liked, commented on, and shared on social media,” according to a 2018 study published in the Journal of Consumer Psychology.

To make sure your tweets get retweeted, aim for 6th to 7th grade level on the Flesch test. Don’t like your score? Reduce your grade level by reducing sentence length and word length.

4. Write simple sentences. Period.

Zarrella also found that retweets are heavier on nouns, proper nouns and third-person verbs than tweets in general. That suggests that newsy, headline-style tweets — subject, verb, object — are more likely to go viral.

Don’t change the subject Newsy, headline-style tweets — subject, verb, object — are more likely to go viral. Chart by Dan Zarrella

Want to see your tweet go viral? Write mostly simple sentences.

And don’t drop the punctuation. Some 98% of retweets contain some form of punctuation, compared with 86% of normal tweets, Zarrella found.

Punctuate, period Some 98% of retweets contain punctuation; just 86% of normal tweets do. So don’t drop the colons, periods and exclamation points. Chart by Dan Zarrella

So don’t forget the colons, periods, commas and hyphens. But do forget semicolons — “the only unretweetable punctuation mark,” according to Zarrella.

5. Keep words short.

Retweets actually have more syllables than ordinary tweets — 1.62 syllables per word vs. 1.58, Zarrella found. Outside the Twitterverse, experts suggest aiming for two-syllable words, so both measures are still, understandably, simple.

Want your tweets to spread? Write mostly in one- and two-syllable words.

And skip the slang. Lazy language like lol, gonna and hey are among the 20 least retweetable words in the English language, Zarrella found. So cut the vernacular.

___

Sources: Kurt Gessler, “Twitter length study: Do longer tweets drive more engagement and referral traffic?,” Medium, Jan. 8, 2020

Ethan Pancer, et. al., “How Readability Shapes Social Media Engagement,” Journal of Consumer Psychology 29(2), October 2018

Dan Macsai, “Report: Nine Scientifically Proven Ways to Get Retweeted on Twitter,” Fast Company, Sept. 25, 2009

Dan Zarrella, “The Science of ReTweets: Viral Content Sharing on Twitter” (PDF), 2009

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How to engage via social media https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-engage-via-social-media/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-engage-via-social-media/#respond Tue, 02 Feb 2021 05:00:32 +0000 http://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=15447 Pass the 70-20-10 test

How can you write social media messages that are relevant, valuable and interesting to friends, fans and followers?

Pass educational consultant Angela Maiers’ 70-20-10 test.… Read the full article

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Pass the 70-20-10 test

How can you write social media messages that are relevant, valuable and interesting to friends, fans and followers?

Pass the 70-20-10 test in social media
Share and share alike Expand your reach and influence on social media with this simple formula.  Image by VPanteon

Pass educational consultant Angela Maiers’ 70-20-10 test. That is:

1. Share 70% of the time.

Give readers information they can use to live their lives better by linking to valuable information — new research, tipsheets and tools

That’s what Guy Kawasaki does. Kawasaki makes himself a go-to guy with interesting, valuable tweets like these:

Tweets like these have earned Kawasaki a spot on Hubspot’s Twitter Elite — tweeters who have the highest power and reach in the Twitter community.

2. Engage 20%.

Put the social in social media: Connect, converse, ask questions, answer them, respond to people who mention you and generally help out your online connections.

You’ll find this approach on Southwest Airlines’ Twitter feed. Sample tweets:

  • Hey everyone, if you have a good winglet pic or airplane window photos ‪@cnnireport wants them! Info here: http://on.cnn.com/PlFJzx
  • ‪@BlessNDress I’m sorry to hear you are having trouble. Please follow & DM your info. & additional feedback. I’ll see if we can help.
  • Alright, NYC locals … tourist attractions are great, but what are your favorite hidden gems? What would you do in one day in New York City?

This engaging Twitter style landed Southwest’s Twitter feed on Time magazine’s list of Top 10 corporate tweeters.

3. Chirp 10%.

In one in 10 tweets, Maiers suggests, go ahead and chit-chat about yourself.

Because the bulk of his tweets inform instead of meforming, the late Zappos CEO Tony Hsei can get away with the occasional chirp like this:

“Swam in Silverton mermaid aquarium on my birthday! Wore costume b/c they don’t allow birthday suits. http://twitpic.com/3fpe9r

Hsei is another honoree on Time magazine’s list of of Top 10 corporate tweeters.

But beware: A little chirping goes a long way. Too much can veer into corporate narcissism.

  • Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, Ann Wylie's content-writing workshop

    How can you write content readers want to read?

    There’s a lot of ME in social MEdia. And there’s a great big I in TwItter. No wonder social media thought leader Brian Solis calls content marketing the egosystem.

    Unfortunately, talking about yourself and your stuff on social channels works about as well as it does at a cocktail party. But watch your social media reach and influence grow when you deliver relevant, valuable, useful content.

    Learn how to identify what content readers want to read at Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, our content-writing workshop.

    You’ll learn to position your company as the expert in the field. Find out how to make sure your posts are welcome guests and not intrusive pests. And discover the power of the most-retweeted word in the English language.

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Do hashtags #help? https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/do-hashtags-help/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/do-hashtags-help/#respond Tue, 02 Feb 2021 04:01:15 +0000 http://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=5842 When it comes to retweeting, they do, says Dan Zarrella

Love them or hate them, hashtags may help you increase retweets.

Or so says Dan Zarrella, HubSpot’s viral marketing scientist.… Read the full article

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When it comes to retweeting, they do, says Dan Zarrella

Love them or hate them, hashtags may help you increase retweets.

Do hashtags help?
Hash it out Tweets containing hashtags are 55% more likely to be retweeted than tweets that do not. Image by Yurii_Yarema

Or so says Dan Zarrella, HubSpot’s viral marketing scientist. Zarrella analyzed his dataset of more than 1.2 million tweets to find out whether hashtags made these news items move further and faster.

The results? Tweets that contained one or more hashtags were 55% more likely to be retweeted than tweets that did not.

Do hashtags help?
Hash it out Tweets containing hashtags are 55% more likely to be retweeted than tweets that do not.

Still … don’t overuse hashtags. Need a hilarious reminder? Check out this Justin Timberlake and Jimmy Fallon video.

And keep in mind this quote, by The New York Times social media staff editor Victor: “The noble hashtag is cursed by a problem Yogi Berra could appreciate: Too many people use it, so no one goes there.”

#Hashtags work … But don’t overuse them. Chart by Buffer
  • Use hashtags, according to research by Buffer Media. Tweets with hashtags get twice the engagement of tweets without them.
  • But don’t overuse them. Tweets with one or two hashtags get 21% higher engagement than those without, Buffer found. But engagement drops when you add more.
  • Make them short. Keep them to 6 characters or less, recommends Vanessa Doctor from Hashtags.org.
  • Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, Ann Wylie's content-writing workshop

    How can you write content readers want to read?

    There’s a lot of ME in social MEdia. And there’s a great big I in TwItter. No wonder social media thought leader Brian Solis calls content marketing the egosystem.

    Unfortunately, talking about yourself and your stuff on social channels works about as well as it does at a cocktail party. But watch your social media reach and influence grow when you deliver relevant, valuable, useful content.

    Learn how to identify what content readers want to read at Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, our content-writing workshop.

    You’ll learn to position your company as the expert in the field. Find out how to make sure your posts are welcome guests and not intrusive pests. And discover the power of the most-retweeted word in the English language.

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How to engage audiences on social media: Share links https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-engage-audiences-on-social-media/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-engage-audiences-on-social-media/#respond Mon, 01 Feb 2021 16:53:41 +0000 https://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=20778 Links increase followers, make messages go viral

Want to expand your reach and influence on Twitter? Share links.

Why links?

Research shows that:

1. Links increase followers.

Read the full article

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Links increase followers, make messages go viral

Want to expand your reach and influence on Twitter? Share links.

How to engage audiences on social media
No missing links The more links you share, the more likely your message is to go viral. So share links to valuable resources with your network. Image by MicroStockHub

Why links?

Research shows that:

1. Links increase followers.

The more links you share, the more followers you’ll get, according to research by viral marketing scientist Dan Zarrella.

For his study, Zarrella analyzed a random selection of more than 130,000 Twitter users. He found that the more links tweeters share the more followers they get.

Links increase followers.
The more links you share, the more followers you’ll have. Chart by Dan Zarrella

Twitter accounts with more than 1,000 followers tend to tweet many more links than those with fewer than 1,000 followers.

Links increase followers.
Twitter accounts with lots of followers tend to tweet more links than those with fewer followers. Chart by Dan Zarrella

Starbucks is a master of this approach. The coffee merchant’s tweeters tweet links to recipes, photos and all things coffee. Sample tweets:

“Mmmm, coffee cupcakes!”
“What’s the secret ingredient in our Chocolate Cinnamon Bread? A pinch of #nomnom
“Cheers! Coffee Ice Cream Martinis #starbucksicecream
“Tiramisu Ice Cream Parfaits anyone?”

Sharing valuable resources via links helped land Starbucks on Time magazine’s list of best corporate Twitter feeds.

People want to know what you know. Link to your research and resources.

2. Links go viral.

The more links you share, the more retweets you’ll get, according to Zarrella’s research. For this study, Zarrella looked at nearly 10 million random tweets and 10 million retweets.

He found that nearly 60% of retweets include links; fewer than 20% of non-retweeted tweets do.

Links go viral.
More linking? Smart thinking The more links you share, the more retweets you’re likely to see. Chart by Dan Zarrella

In another study, this one by SalesForce, tweets with links generated 86% more retweets than those without.

See how it’s done on JetBlue’s Twitter feed. The discount airline’s tweeters tweet links to travel tips and cheap seats. Sample tweets:

“Thunderstorms in the Northeast are causing delays and possible cancellations. Fee waivers in effect, check details at http://bit.ly/jbalert
“To celebrate our newest destination Grand Cayman, we’re offering fares from JFK at $139 & Boston at $159 terms apply. http://cot.ag/OfgTBa”
“Getaways Cheeps! $299 pp/dbl occ limited avail 2nt pkgs to Nassau, Bahamas w/air from JFK or HPN. Terms apply. http://cot.ag/J8yBkB”

JetBlue also made Time magazine’s list of top corporate tweeters.

Want people to spread the word? Provide links to resources, tips and tools.

Best practices for linking

OK, so you’re in for more links. To make the most of your links, use these linking best practices:

1. Link 60% to 80% of the time.

Share links in 60 to 80% of your tweets, Zarrella counsels.

Link 60% to 80% of the time.
Take me to your reader If you want your tweets to go viral, share research and resources via links 60 to 80% of the time. Chart by Dan Zarrella

One great model of this approach is Southwest Airline’s Twitter feed. The discount airline’s tweeters tweet links to travel tips and cheap seats. Sample tweets:

“Hey DENVER! @byallmeansband will provide the summer sounds @downtowndenver tonight w/ a free concert!  Details here: http://cot.ag/OM6drM”
“Does your travel to-do list include attending a concert at the famed @RedRocksCO? We’re here to help.”
“We’ve lowered fares for fall travel with prices starting at $69 one-way to select destinations! (restrictions apply) http://cot.ag/MXOcd1”

Southwest also made Time magazine’s list of best corporate tweeters.

2. Where to place links.

Turns out there’s a place for everything on Twitter, too.

Followers are more likely to click on links placed 25% into your tweet than at the beginning or end, according to Zarrella’s research.

where-to-place-links
Sweet spot Links placed 25% of the way into a tweet are more likely to get clicked than those at the beginning, middle or end. Chart by Dan Zarrella

For his study, he used bit.ly API to analyze 200,000 random Tweets containing bit.ly links. Then he correlated the relationship of the link’s position in the tweet with its click-through rate. Those located 25% of the way in got the most click-throughs.

Want to increase click-throughs? It may be a matter of nudging your link a little to the left.

Link up.

Want your social media status updates to move further and faster? Share more links.

  • Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, Ann Wylie's content-writing workshop

    How can you write content readers want to read?

    There’s a lot of ME in social MEdia. And there’s a great big I in TwItter. No wonder social media thought leader Brian Solis calls content marketing the egosystem.

    Unfortunately, talking about yourself and your stuff on social channels works about as well as it does at a cocktail party. But watch your social media reach and influence grow when you deliver relevant, valuable, useful content.

    Learn how to identify what content readers want to read at Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, our content-writing workshop.

    You’ll learn to position your company as the expert in the field. Find out how to make sure your posts are welcome guests and not intrusive pests. And discover the power of the most-retweeted word in the English language.

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How to be relevant on social media https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-be-relevant-on-social-media/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-be-relevant-on-social-media/#comments Mon, 01 Feb 2021 15:45:31 +0000 https://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=20725 Write about the reader, not about us and our stuff

In a recent “Dilbert” cartoon, Dilbert and Wally beg their pointy-haired boss to keep them constantly updated on all his daily activities via Twitter.… Read the full article

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Write about the reader, not about us and our stuff

In a recent “Dilbert” cartoon, Dilbert and Wally beg their pointy-haired boss to keep them constantly updated on all his daily activities via Twitter.

How to be relevant on social media
It’s all about you Whether you’re writing for Facebook, Twitter or other social networks, writing about your readers increases followers and engagement. Image by fotogestoeber

“We find you fascinating,” Wally says. “Oh, yes. Every little thing you do is interesting.”

Fast forward to the last frame, where Wally and Dilbert are sitting with their feet up in the conference room, drinking coffee and checking Twitter on their mobile phones.

“Where’s idiot boy now?” Wally asks.

“In the parking lot,” Dilbert answers. “No need to look busy yet.”

Are you meforming?

Do you really think your social media users find every little thing you do fascinating?

Four out of five Twitter users seem to, according to a study by Rutgers University professors Mor Naaman and Jeffrey Boase.

The professors dissected more than 3,000 tweets from more than 350 Twitter users and concluded that 80% of tweeters are “meformers”— those who write mostly “me now” status updates. “Me now” updates cover everyday activities, like going to yoga or heading to happy hour.

The organizational version of meforming includes, “XYZ Company …”:

  • President of XYZ company to present conference speech.
  • XYZ Company moves to new office space.
  • XYZ Company launches new product.
  • XYZ Company hires new VP.
  • XYZ Company wins award.
  • XYZ Company signs client.

“There’s a lot of me in social media,” says thought leader Brian Solis. He refers to social media as the “egosystem.” And he points out the great big I in the middle of Twitter.

There’s a lot of me in social media.
— Brian Solis, principal analyst at Altimeter Group

This study comes on the heels of research showing that 40% of all tweets are pointless babble, along the lines of “Eating a sandwich now,” according to a random sample of 2,000 messages by Pear Analytics.

No wonder 57% of Generation Y members believe social media is for narcissists, according to a new study by San Diego State University psychology professor Jean Twenge.

So how do we avoid organizational narcissism? Whether you’re developing blog post content or social media posts, polishing your social media presence, creating your content calendar or just staying active in front of your social networks, these seven content marketing strategies should keep you relevant to your prospective customers:

1. Write to and about the reader.

It’s the most retweeted word in the English language, according to viral marketing scientist Dan Zarrella: You.

And no wonder. Regardless of the type of content you’re creating, starting with you pushes the benefits to the front of the sentence and focuses your message on your target audience’s favorite subject.

Second-person pronouns — like you — increase readability. First-person pronouns, like we, reduced it.
— Ralph Tyler and Edgar Dale pronoun research

In fact, we’ve known that you was a writing power tool since 1934. That’s the year Ralph Tyler and Edgar Dale had adults read passages about personal health taken from newspapers, magazines, textbooks and children’s health books. Then they gave the readers multiple-choice tests about what they’d read.

The researchers found that the more second-person pronouns — you’s— existed in the passages, the higher readability soared. First-person pronouns (I, me, we, us) and third-person pronouns (she, her, he, him, it, they, them), on the other hand, reduced readability.

“It’s not ‘who, what, when, where, why and how,’ it’s ‘YOU, what, when, where, why and how.’”
— Anita Allen, communicator at Sabre Travel Solutions

Folks, that’s 80 years of research telling us to write about the reader and the reader’s needs. That’s not exactly breaking news. And still, day after day, year after year, we show up at work, open our laptops and write — once again — about us and our stuff.

“People spend 99% of the time thinking about themselves,” says Liam Scott, a Toronto-based speechwriter. “Actually, that’s probably a little low.”

Digital marketers: The results are in, and you won. Want to reach the reader? Write to and about the reader.

2. Put the reader first.

Here’s a simple step: Start your next sentence with you.

  • Instead of We’re introducing a new disability insurance, try You’ll get back to work faster, thanks to our new Ability Assurance.
  • Instead of com helps you improve productivity, try Get all your work done in half the time, be the office hero and go home early with Trainingnet.com’s new webinar.
  • Instead of XYZ company offers SuperPlantGro, try You’ll grow bigger, lusher plants — and never have to water again — with XYZ’s SuperPlantGro

To focus your message on your readers’ interests, put the reader first. Start your sentence — start all of your social media marketing, for that matter — with you.

3. Try the imperative voice.

Also known as the command voice, the imperative voice can be commanding: Go to your room! Do the dishes! Take out the trash!

Think of it instead as the invitation voice: Make money … Save money … Save time … Avoid effort.

When sharing content, write directly to your readers about how they can benefit from your products, services, programs and ideas.

4. Use a placeholder for you.

When you doesn’t work, try a placeholder for you. That’s what the writers of these headlines from PRSA Silver Anvil Award-winning campaigns did:

  • Blood Cancer Patients and Advocates Visit Capitol Hill to Inspire Continued Support for Be the Match: July 18 Legislative Day event aimed at delivering more cures to patients in need (Be the Match)
  • Teens Get Opportunity to Celebrate With an Idol: State Farm and Grammy Award Winner Kelly Clarkson team up for teen driver safety (State Farm)
  • Parents and teen drivers dangerously disconnected: New State Farm survey reveals an alarming gap between parents’ and teens views on driver safety licensing laws (State Farm)

5. Count me out.

The more you talk about yourself on Twitter, the fewer followers you’re likely to have.

Give me a break
Give me a break The more you tweet about yourself, the fewer followers you’ll have.

Or so says Zarrella. Using TweetPsyche data on more than 60,000 Twitter users, he looked at self-reference on Twitter. He found that Twitter users who don’t talk about themselves much tend to have more users.

“Want more followers?” Zarrella asks. “Stop talking about yourself.”

6. Spread yourself thin.

The more you tweet about yourself, the fewer retweets you’ll get.

Don’t self-destruct
Don’t self-destruct Referring to yourself reduces retweets. In one study, tweets that went viral had only half the self-references as those that did not. Chart by Dan Zarrella

Zarrella compared tweets that had been retweeted with those that had not. Non-retweets had nearly twice the number of self-references as tweets that went viral.

Twitter list
Twitter list What’s the best way to write tweets that go viral? Self-reference is the topic most likely to not get retweeted.

“I’m not on Twitter to hear about you and your life,” Zarrella writes. “I mean, unless we’re friends in real life, of course. I’m on Twitter to get information that will either benefit me, or help others (and by extension, benefit me). … So stop talking about yourself, and make content that others can relate to and get value from!”

7. Make it all about me on Facebook.

On the other hand, talking about yourself on Facebook actually increases engagement.

Count me in
Count me in Self-reference garners more likes on Facebook. Chart by Dan Zarrella

Zarrella learned that status updates with personal references (I, me) tend to get more likes than those without.

That’s in contrast with … well, every channel everywhere in the history of mankind. Usually, focusing on you, or writing to and about the reader, works better than self-reference.

Stop meforming.

One more finding from Zarrella: While you is the most retweeted word in the English language, me-focused words reduce retweets.

Retweetable words

Among the least retweeted words in the English language: Answers to the original Twitter question, “Whatcha doing,” including “-ing” words, like “going,” “watching,” “listening.”

As in “I am.”

As in “me now.”

Sorry, “meformers”: We’re just not that into you.

On Twitter, as in so much more in life, better “you” than me.

  • Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, Ann Wylie's content-writing workshop

    How can you write content readers want to read?

    There’s a lot of ME in social MEdia. And there’s a great big I in TwItter. No wonder social media thought leader Brian Solis calls content marketing the egosystem.

    Unfortunately, talking about yourself and your stuff on social channels works about as well as it does at a cocktail party. But watch your social media reach and influence grow when you deliver relevant, valuable, useful content.

    Learn how to identify what content readers want to read at Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, our content-writing workshop.

    You’ll learn to position your company as the expert in the field. Find out how to make sure your posts are welcome guests and not intrusive pests. And discover the power of the most-retweeted word in the English language.

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How to engage an audience on social media https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-engage-an-audience-on-social-media/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-engage-an-audience-on-social-media/#respond Mon, 01 Feb 2021 13:07:35 +0000 https://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=22386 Give readers step-by-step how-to information

“How do you find time to tweet?” my speakers’ network e-zine asked subscribers.

“I don’t have time to not use social media,” I wrote back.… Read the full article

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Give readers step-by-step how-to information

“How do you find time to tweet?” my speakers’ network e-zine asked subscribers.

How to engage an audience on social media
Give the people what they want Information I can use to live my life better travels farther and faster on social media. Image by Ivelin Radkov

“I don’t have time to not use social media,” I wrote back.

That’s because the people I follow on social media (heart emojis to @ShelHoltz, @BillSpaniel, @mar_de_palabras and others who surprise and delight me every day) serve as sort of a virtual research team. They scour the Web, finding valuable information — new studies, quotes, resources and insights — so I don’t have to.

“Our readers don’t want to just read stories. What they really want is a big button they can push that says, ‘Solve my problem.’ It’s up to us to be the button.”
— Brian J. O’Connor, editor at Bankrate.com

That is, they’re “informers” — the 20% of Twitter users who tweet information, ideas and insights — not “meformers.”

Not surprisingly, informers have nearly three times as many followers as meformers, according to a study by Rutgers University professors Mor Naaman and Jeffrey Boase.

Just two-thirds (66%) of content marketing programs prioritize their audience’s informational needs over their organization’s sales/promotional message, according to the 2020 B2B Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends – North America (PDF), a new study by Content Marketing Institute and MarketingProfs. Yet, 88% of the top performers do.

Here are 9 ways to increase engagement on social media by being an informer, not a meformer:

1. Share helpful information.

Why do people share on email, Twitter and Facebook and other social networks? According to a study by Chadwick Martin Bailey:

  • Because I find it interesting/entertaining: 72%
  • Because I think it will be helpful to recipients: 58%
  • To get a laugh: 58%

Want your status updates to travel the world instead of staying home on the couch? Get people to share your content by making your social media posts helpful to your audience.

2. Write service stories.

What kind of information do people retweet? News and how-tos (PDF), according to research by Dan Zarrella, viral marketing scientist for HubSpot.

Tell them how to News and how-tos are the types of social media content most likely to be retweeted. Chart by Dan Zarrella

Here’s how often six kinds of information get shared on Twitter:

  • News: 78%
  • How-to information: 58%
  • Entertainment: 53%
  • Opinion: 50%
  • Products: 45%
  • Small talk: 12%

Please note: News is what CNN and the BBC report. It’s not your urgent updates about your Widget 2.6.3.1.

That leaves how-to information, or service stories, as our best bet for content, according to Twitter analytics.

Want your content marketing pieces to move more quickly through your social channels? Create content that’s packed with tips and techniques.

3. Cover solutions, not services.

How can business-to-business bloggers build brand awareness by engaging readers?

  1. Focus on the customer, not on the company. Don’t let your posts sound like a series of press releases. Instead, ask, “What problems can I solve? What expertise can I share? What issues can I weigh in on?” Answering questions and providing good service are good social media marketing.
  2. Think of your company as a publisher. “Blog like you’re the best trade magazine in your industry,” says Kipp Bodnar, inbound marketing manager at Hubspot.
  3. Promote resources, not products and services. Share white papers, studies, webinars and conference speeches on your social media platforms.

“They don’t really care about your products,” says Rick Burnes, inbound marketing manager at HubSpot. “What they’re interested in is solutions to their problems.”

Offering tips and techniques that serve your customers also help you position your company as the expert in the field.

4. Tweet like H&R Block.

That’s what H&R Block does. The company’s Twitter feed offers tax tips and help on demand. Sample tweets:

“IRS urges you to perform a Paycheck Checkup today to make sure your tax withholding is right for you. [Link]”
“Have a question or problem while doing your taxes online? We have tax pros standing by to call or chat. If you’re really stuck, they can even share your screen to help you through it. Expert help, if and when you need it with H&R Block online. [Link]”
“More people file free with H&R Block Online. Find out if you’re one of them: [Link]”

This how-to approach earned H&R Block a place on Time magazine’s list of top 10 corporate Twitter feeds.

5. Share tips & techniques.

Take a tip from Whole Foods Market: Give your social media network news they can use. The all-organic market tweets recipes and how-to stories about cooking:

“Check out our foolproof three-step method to cutting a mango. Plus, get tropical ideas for ceviche, grilling and desserts. [Link]”
“We got an all-access pass to @Joan_Nathan’s kitchen while she helped us create our Passover dinner menu. Check it out: [Link]”
“This melon guide is big summer vibes. Check it out: [Link]”
“Our wine experts pair the top 12 wines with summer. Reds, whites and bubbles for all occasions. Read their suggestions now. [Link]”

Whole Foods’ recipes and service stories have made it one of the most followed brands on Twitter, with 1.9 million followers. No wonder Whole Foods landed on Time magazine’s list of top 10 corporate Twitter feeds.

What tips and techniques can you share on your Instagram account?

6. Quantify value with numerals in headlines.

Coverlines with numbers sell publications at the checkout counter. That’s because those numbers promise quantity and value. (Oddly, odd numbers sell better than even ones.)

The same thing’s true in social media. Add a numeral to your blog post headline, and it will make the rounds more widely on Facebook pages.

“In a wide range of marketing arenas, digits have been shown to perform very well,” Zarrella writes. “They tend to help conversion rates in the form of prices. And on social news sites like Digg, ‘Top 10’ style posts have always done well.”

In Zarrella’s research, blog post headlines:

  • Including the numerals 1 through 9 got passed along more often than average on Facebook
  • Without digits got shared less often than average on Facebook

7. Deliver more value through links.

The more links you share, the more followers you’ll get, according to research by viral marketing scientist Dan Zarrella. For his study, Zarrella analyzed a random selection of more than 130,000 Twitter users.

He found that Twitter accounts with more than 1,000 followers tend to tweet many more links than those with fewer than 1,000 followers.

And the more links you share, the more retweets you’ll get, according to Zarrella. For this study, Zarrella looked at nearly 10 million random tweets and 10 million retweets.

He found that nearly 60% of retweets include links; fewer than 20% of non-retweeted tweets do.

8. Post novel ideas.

Stop posting the same old thing. Fresh ideas — even fresh words — move further and faster on social media.

Say something new Want to get retweeted? Share new information, novel ideas. Image gif by Dan Zarrella

For this study, Zarrella counted how many times each word appeared in his sample set of 10 million tweets:

  • Each word in a regular tweet was found 89.19 other times in the sample.
  • Each word in a retweet was found only 16.37 other times.

Want to get retweeted? Share something different. You might even coin your own word.

9. Transform news and events into insights.

Alan Weiss is the consultant’s consultant. His social media status updates rock.

Instead of blah-blahing about what he ate for dinner or bragging that he’s tweeting from the Imperial Suite at the Park Hyatt-Vendôme, he spins news items and everyday events into insights and ideas:

“If you want a referral, don’t ask someone to ‘represent’ you and never send materials. Here’s the line to request: ‘Joan, I’d like to introduce Tom who’s done outstanding work and I think the two of you would benefit significantly from knowing each other.’”
“Use observed behavior and evidence, not ad hominem attack and assumption. ‘You’re late by 15 minutes each time we schedule critical calls on which you’re needed,’ is better than ‘You’re clearly not a team player.’”
“If you don’t know the size of your prospect’s business, or their major competition, or if they’re independent or a subsidiary, don’t show up. Or did you pass all your tests in school without studying? If so, I guess you’re just gifted….”

How can you take a tip from Weiss and transform news and everyday events into insights and ideas?

Learn more ways to engage your audience on social media.

Are you an informer? Or a meformer?
  • Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, Ann Wylie's content-writing workshop

    How can you write content readers want to read?

    There’s a lot of ME in social MEdia. And there’s a great big I in TwItter. No wonder social media thought leader Brian Solis calls content marketing the egosystem.

    Unfortunately, talking about yourself and your stuff on social channels works about as well as it does at a cocktail party. But watch your social media reach and influence grow when you deliver relevant, valuable, useful content.

    Learn how to identify what content readers want to read at Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, our content-writing workshop.

    You’ll learn to position your company as the expert in the field. Find out how to make sure your posts are welcome guests and not intrusive pests. And discover the power of the most-retweeted word in the English language.

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How to engage with your audience on social media: Avoid small talk https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-engage-with-your-audience-on-social-media/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2021/02/how-to-engage-with-your-audience-on-social-media/#respond Mon, 01 Feb 2021 09:21:01 +0000 https://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=20780 Skip product promos, irrelevant twaddle

Which of these Facebook posts is most likely to increase engagement?

“We’re pleased to introduce our latest WhatzIts.”
“Try these three ways to build your business using WhatzIts.”

Read the full article

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Skip product promos, irrelevant twaddle

Which of these Facebook posts is most likely to increase engagement?

How to engage with your audience on social media
All talk, no action Chit-chat does not fare well on Twitter. People who chat on Twitter more are less likely to get retweeted than those who chat less. Image by happystock
“We’re pleased to introduce our latest WhatzIts.”
“Try these three ways to build your business using WhatzIts.”
“How ’bout dem Bears?”

If you guessed the second one, you’re right, according to Facebook’s own research.

For the study, Facebook researchers looked at more than 1,200 posts from 23 brands. Then they ran the posts through a quantitative model that predicts which posts will generate more engagement — aka likes, comments and shares.

Brand-related posts perform best, the researchers found. But not all brand-related posts: Product and service promotions didn’t fare well in the study.

So:

Don’t go off brand.

Non-brand-related posts — “Hang in there everybody. Monday will be over before we know it!” — don’t engage fans very well, either.

“Data from Facebook itself tell us that what looks good on the social-media guru’s presentation deck isn’t the best approach for making Facebook work for the brand.”
— Matt Creamer, in AdAge

“Among the weirdness Facebook’s existence has loosed upon the world is the idea that it’s OK, and perhaps even good business, for brands to sidle up and give you verbal balm for your case of the Mondays, ask for predictions on the big game and offer random thoughts on things that have not a whit to do with their product or service,” writes Matt Creamer in AdAge.

“The touchy-feely strategy is meant to be conversational — human, even. But new data from Facebook itself tell us that what looks good on the social-media guru’s presentation deck isn’t the best approach for making Facebook work for the brand.”

2. Avoid small talk.

Small talk performs poorly on Twitter, too.

Small talk is the type of content least likely to be retweeted (PDF), according to research by viral marketing scientist Dan Zarrella.

Avoid small talk.
Training wheels News and how-tos are kinds of content most likely to be retweeted. The least likely? Small talk. Chart by Dan Zarrella

Here’s how often six key kinds of content get shared on Twitter:

  1. News: 78% (FYI: This is for CNN and the BBC. They’re not looking for urgent updates about your Widget 6.3.7.)
  2. How-to information: 58%
  3. Entertainment: 53%
  4. Opinion: 50%
  5. Products: 45%
  6. Small talk: 12%

Want more retweets? Pack blog posts and status updates with tips and techniques.

3. Avoid too much chatting.

Tweeters who send a lot of @ replies are less likely to get retweeted than those who chit-chat less, according to another study by Zarrella. For this study, he analyzed the percentage of “@” replies to find the effect of conversing on Twitter results.

Avoid too much chatting.
It’s not about you The fewer @ replies, the more retweets on Twitter, according to viral marketing scientist Dan Zarrella.

How much conversation is enough? Aim for about 10% “@” replies among your tweets.

“It makes sense when you think about it,” Zarrella writes. “I’m much more likely to retweet an interesting piece of content that you’ve posted than a bit of Twitter chit-chat, especially when that chit-chat is part of an ongoing conversation of which I’m not a part.”

4. Don’t answer ‘What are you doing?’

What are you doing? That question has launched a gazillion tweets. Turns out your Twitter followers don’t really want to know.

In another study, Zarella analyzed his database of more than 30 million retweets, comparing them to a sample of more than 2 million random tweets.

The result: His list of the 20 least retweetable words:

  1. Game
  2. Going
  3. Haha
  4. Lol
  5. But
  6. Watching
  7. Work
  8. Home
  9. Night
  10. Bed
  11. Well
  12. Sleep
  13. Gonna
  14. Hey
  15. Tired
  16. Tomorrow
  17. Some
  18. Back
  19. Bored
  20. Listening

What do you notice about these words?

Hey! I’m watching the webinar while listening to the game. Haha!
I’m bored at work, so I’m going home. Lol. I’ll be back tomorrow.
I’m tired. Gonna go to bed and get some sleep. Night! Sleep well!

Nobody wants to know what you’re doing! So stop me-forming!

Instead of telling your followers what you’re eating for breakfast, recommend a great blog post or article.

  • Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, Ann Wylie's content-writing workshop

    How can you write content readers want to read?

    There’s a lot of ME in social MEdia. And there’s a great big I in TwItter. No wonder social media thought leader Brian Solis calls content marketing the egosystem.

    Unfortunately, talking about yourself and your stuff on social channels works about as well as it does at a cocktail party. But watch your social media reach and influence grow when you deliver relevant, valuable, useful content.

    Learn how to identify what content readers want to read at Get Clicked, Liked & Shared, our content-writing workshop.

    You’ll learn to position your company as the expert in the field. Find out how to make sure your posts are welcome guests and not intrusive pests. And discover the power of the most-retweeted word in the English language.

___

Sources: Matt Creamer, “Facebook to Brands: You’re Posting Stuff Wrong,” AdAge, May 7, 2012

Dan Zarrella, “The Science of ReTweets,” HubSpot

Dan Zarrella, “What percentage of your tweets should be links or replies,” January 11, 2012

Dan Zarrella, “The 20 least retweetable words,” August 25, 2009

The post How to engage with your audience on social media: Avoid small talk appeared first on Wylie Communications, Inc..

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