Fluid Studio Twitter Presentation March 2009

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Transcript of Fluid Studio Twitter Presentation March 2009

p 801 295 9820f 801 951 5815

www.fluid-studio.net1065 South 500 West

Bountiful, Utah 84010

How many have heard of Facebook?Twitter?LinkedIn?YouTube?

How manyare on Facebook?Twitter?LinkedIn?YouTube?

Contact me:

Text “dyejo” to 50500

John Dyecell: 801.631.4736email: johnd@fluid-studio.netweb: www.fluid-studio.netTwitter: @dyejo

Free service provided byhttp://contxts.com

Before we begin . . .I am a firm believer in principles—out of the chute,

you should know there is no “silver bullet”

We all havea circle ofinfluence. People areinfluenced by those they trust

Circle of Influence

Circle of Concern What youcare about.

What you cando something

about.

People do not want to be sold to—they want tointeract and be heard

You cannot control the conversation, but you can participatein it

The younger your customer, the lesscredible the traditional “hard” market-ing sell is

The 4 P’s of marketing (product, price, place, promotion) still exist, but the 3 R’s (relevant, real, responsive) are rising quickly in a web 2.0 world, and will result in a 4th R—relationship

What isTwitter?The answer to “what are you doing” in 140 charactersor less

Twitter is a giant cocktail party where you can join theconversation at will and flit in and out

A lot of people ask: Why would anyone want to do this?

Twitter’s Growth

source: Nielsen NetView, 2/09, U.S., Home and Work

RANK Site Feb 08 Feb 09 % growth

1

2

3

4

5

Twitter.com

Zimbio

Facebook

Multiply

Wikia

475,000

809,000

20,043,000

821,000

1,381,000

7,038,000

2,752,000

65,704,000

2,394,000

3,758,000

1382%

240%

228%

192%

172%

Twitter’sUsers

In January, 735,000 unique visitors accessed the Twitter Web site through their mobile phones. The average unique visitor went to Twitter.com 14 times during the month and

spent an average of seven minutes on the site.

Age Group Unique Audience Composition %

2-17

18-24

25-34

35-49

55+

65+

250,000

**

1,379,000

2,935,000

1,165,000

477,000

3.6

**

19.6

41.7

16.6

6.8

source: Nielsen NetView, 2/09, U.S., Home and Work**These demographics have insufficient sample sizes

Why Twitter might be the easiest social media for your organization to break into for creating brand interactivity and real time relationships with your customers

1. Twitter, as a service, is free

Why Twitter might be the easiest social media for your organization to break into for creating brand interactivity and real time relationships with your customers

1. Twitter, as a service, is free2. Getting started is easy

Why Twitter might be the easiest social media for your organization to break into for creating brand interactivity and real time relationships with your customers

1. Twitter, as a service, is free2. Getting started is easy3. It only takes seconds (and 140 char- acters or less) to get your point across

Why Twitter might be the easiest social media for your organization to break into for creating brand interactivity and real time relationships with your customers

1. Twitter, as a service, is free2. Getting started is easy3. It only takes seconds (and 140 char- acters or less) to get your point across4. Multitudes of prospects and customers can get your updates

Why Twitter might be the easiest social media for your organization to break into for creating brand interactivity and real time relationships with your customers

1. Twitter, as a service, is free2. Getting started is easy3. It only takes seconds (and 140 char- acters or less) to get your point across4. Multitudes of prospects and customers can get your updates5. It doesn’t have to be a time- consuming activity

Why Twitter might be the easiest social media for your organization to break into for creating brand interactivity and real time relationships with your customers

1. Twitter, as a service, is free2. Getting started is easy3. It only takes seconds (and 140 char- acters or less) to get your point across4. Multitudes of prospects and customers can get your updates5. It doesn’t have to be a time- consuming activity6. Google loves tweets (and you should too!)

Why Twitter might be the easiest social media for your organization to break into for creating brand interactivity and real time relationships with your customers

1. Twitter, as a service, is free2. Getting started is easy3. It only takes seconds (and 140 char- acters or less) to get your point across4. Multitudes of prospects and customers can get your updates5. It doesn’t have to be a time- consuming activity6. Google loves tweets (and you should too!)7. Easy way to share updates and links

Why Twitter might be the easiest social media for your organization to break into for creating brand interactivity and real time relationships with your customers

1. Twitter, as a service, is free2. Getting started is easy3. It only takes seconds (and 140 char- acters or less) to get your point across4. Multitudes of prospects and customers can get your updates5. It doesn’t have to be a time- consuming activity6. Google loves tweets (and you should too!)7. Easy way to share updates and links8. Create real time, interactive relationships

How do I access Twitter?Web and mobile devices via web and freestanding applications

Three types of messages

1-Standard message—visible to all your followers

2-@ messages—only visible to those followers who are also following the recipient

3-Direct Messages—only available to the recipient

How do I let people knowI am on Twitter?

1. Put it on your e-mail signature and business card2. Put it on your website and blog3. Follow thought leaders and comment on their tweets—Interact!4. Find people who are talking about your company and follow them

How do businesses use Twitter?

service-oriented businesses

Use Twitter for customer service and providing assistance

Search.twitter.com allows you to do custom searches for query strings

You can also create interfaces so your search is dropped into a web or blog page; this allows a person to actually get

in touch with the prospect or customer in real time

Rhodes Rolls example

Socialmention.com allows you to search social media more extensively

information-based businesses

Use Twitter to provide information that is relevant, timely, and interesting

You can embed links (can compress links through is.gd or tinyurl.com to save characters)

Your goal is to become a trusted information source—an expert--—a veritable storehouse of knowledge

You can tweet more as a company, not as a person

Strategically create your plan!

1-Gather information2-Only link to trustworthy sites

3-Follow industry thought leaders and read what they read

4-Ask questions/seek opinions

twtapps

Twitter is a great LISTENING tool

Top 100 Twitter ToolsTweetlater—”repetition is not a bad thing”

70-20-10 Formula:

Share Resources (70) - Successful learning in the 21st Century is not whatyou know, but what you can share, so 70% of total Twittertime is spent

sharing information, opinions, links, and tools.

Collaboration (20) - 20% of Tweets are directly responding, connecting, collaborating, and co-creating with like-minded Twitter colleagues. From these important tweets, lifelong professional and personal relationships are forged.

Chit-Chat (10) - 10% of Twittertalk is “chit-chat-how’s-your-hat” stuff. Itis in these “trivial” details shared about working out, favorite movies, politics,

and life in general that we connect with others as human beings.

—Angela Maiers, educator, author, blogger

Social Media in less than an hour a day

Inthisweek

Utah Business Magazine

Utah Business Magazine

Twitter:1634 followers

Facebook Page:54 fans

Facebook Group:304 members

“Social media has allowed Utah Business to garner more participation with our subscribers than ever before.”

“Social media has created online channels for the business community to participate in within Utah... social networks are just the place where people

go, everyone knows about [them] and it provides a way for business people to network more efficiently and with more people.”

—Jared Preusz, Utah Business Magazine

Comcast

Comcast uses @comcastcares to helpwith customer service

@comcastcares is a real person, Frank Eliason, who interacts with customers on Twitter

Frank helps customers in real-time

Comcast receives a lot of press (and a lot of happy customers) for this unique way of

interacting with their customer base

Zappos.com

CEO Tony Hsieh uses Twitter heavily and has a following of 287,000+

433 Zappos associates are on Twitter

Zappos uses Twitter for customer contestsand customer service

Zappos gets a lot of press for their unique approach tocustomer service and advertising

Skittles is now doing some fun things . . .

Skittles is now doing some fun things . . .

Contact me:

Text “dyejo” to 50500

John Dyecell: 801.631.4736email: johnd@fluid-studio.netweb: www.fluid-studio.netTwitter: @dyejo

Free service provided byhttp://contxts.com