Posts Tagged ‘followers’

Generating Traffic Using Twitter |

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

Most people know that Twitter is an awesome way to keep current on what’s going on in the world these days. whether the goal is to keep up on the latest specials from your favorite businesses or to simply keep up with your friends’ lives, Twitter is a great tool. Interestingly, most people claim to be annoyed by the term ‘tweet’, yet studies show that the site is still growing in popularity

Using Twitter is easy, even if you’ve never done it before. After you have created an account, you can add short messages (less than 140 characters) simply by typing them in. these messages, or ‘tweets’, are sent to everyone that has become one of your “followers”. If you find other people or businesses you’d like to keep up on, you can choose to be a ‘follower’ of them, and you’ll be updated whenever they add a new post.

Due to its rising popularity, it’s quickly becoming an effective way to get more visitors to your website. More and more businesses and individuals are using it to increase traffic. If you know how to do it, you can do the same.

There are several reasons why this is becoming more common:

*It’s user-friendly. Anyone that knows even the basics of computers and the internet can easily use it.

*It’s widely accessible. People can use it from any computer or even their cell phones. they can get updates from anywhere. they don’t need to carry around stacks of coupons anymore. they can just go to Twitter from their phone and see if any new specials have been posted from the business they are about to visit.

*Its instantaneous. most users are constantly checking for updates. It has become a pretty big part of their lives. And if they happen to ‘follow’ you, that makes you a part of their lives as well.

*Its popularity is growing. Thousands of people are joining Twitter every day. And if I’ve only learned one thing about society in my entire life, it’s that a majority of the people in the world like to ‘keep up with the Joneses’.

The first step to take in order to increase your website traffic is to simply gain new followers. Like the proverbial tree in the forest, if you’re tweeting and no one is there to listen, it’s not really making any sound. One of the easiest ways to gain instant followers is to notify your other network sources. If you have an email list or a list of business contacts, let them know that you’ll be updating your Twitter account more often. If you don’t have this option, start following other people or businesses the same or related field. Many of these users will follow you in return, and if you add interesting or informative tweets properly, the word will spread.

Once you have a number of followers, you want to make sure you use your tweets wisely. Don’t waste time by talking just to be heard:

*Keeping your relationships current. whether they are clients, business contacts, or friends, Twitter can help you keep your followers updated with your latest news, just as following them will keep you updated on them. this type of two-way communication will likely lead to a better and long term relationship. You even have the option to follow-up or ‘re-tweet’ their tweets through other lines of communication. this kind of effort will likely lead to good things down the road.

*Announce new product releases. If you have a number of followers, Twitter is a good way to announce a new product, website, or offer. You can also use it to slowly build up excitement about an upcoming release or announcement.

*Website updates or changes. If there is anything new or different on your website, even if it’s something as small as a new article, spread the word on Twitter. this will likely cause your followers to visit your site again even if they are regular visitors.

*Become a valued resource. If there are things going on in the world that interest you or might interest your followers, spread the word. People like gaining valuable or interesting information and they may just pass your tweet around to others rather then doing their own.

Whether we like it or not, Twitter has become a practically essential part of living in the 21st century. The numbers show that it’s becoming more popular every single day. A business is doing themselves a disservice by not utilizing its potential to grow their website traffic.

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Demi Moore's Twitter account part of suicide help for Florida teen …

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

CASSELBERRY, Fla. (AP) — Actresses Demi Moore and Nia Vardalos were linked to an online chain of Twitter posts that ultimately led to Florida authorities intervening Friday when an 18-year-old man threatened to commit suicide.

Moore’s Twitter account, mrskutcher, was among those responding to a message from a young man threatening to hang himself in his front yard in Casselberry, north of Orlando. Moore – with more than 2.5 million followers – and husband Ashton Kutcher are both active on the social network.

Vardalos’ eponymous account included a message that she had called a suicide hotline and been connected to Florida police. “I gave his name+city. they went to home, helped him,” one message read.

Listen to the 911 calls here

The Seminole County Sheriff’s Office said authorities received two calls around 2:30 a.m., one from California and one from Vancouver, British Columbia. Both callers reported the suicide threat on Twitter. There was no record of the callers’ names, Lt. Sonia Pisano said.

Deputies went to a home and took the man to a hospital, Pisano said.

The teen’s mother told the deputy responding that her son “was very emotional and diagnosed with obsessive compulsive disorder,” according to a report released Friday by the sheriff’s office. her son was sitting at his computer desk crying when he told the officer he “did not know what to do with himself without help” and admitted to posting the tweet.

The man was then placed in protective custody.

A phone message left by the Associated Press at the home was not immediately returned.

Calls to representatives for Moore and for Vardalos, who starred in “My Big fat Greek Wedding,” went unanswered early Friday.

Moore’s Twitter account was involved in a similar case last April, when a California woman messaged that she was going to kill herself. San Jose police said they took a woman to a hospital for “psychiatric evaluation” after someone called about a tweet sent to Moore threatening suicide.

How to Retweet Using Twitter and TweetDeck: Passing on Messages …

Saturday, March 20th, 2010


Passing on Messages with the Retweet Function and Traditional Method

Mar 19, 2010Zoe Robinson

Twitter’s retweet function allows fun, amusing and important messages to be passed on quickly between groups of followers. However, the method behind it can be confusing to both newcomers and those who know how to tweet but are unfamiliar with other Twitter functions.

What is a Retweet?

Retweeting is, basically, copying what another Twitter user has written into a new tweet, so anyone following the new Twitterer will see the message. in order to avoid plagiarism, the original twitterer’s name is usually added to the start of the new tweet; along with a statement that the message is a retweet.

As with much of Twitter culture and etiquette, retweeting began as an informal process where Twitter users would simply copy and paste tweets they liked into their own twitter feed; usually preceded by a comment of their own and “RT @username”, where username is the name of the original messenger. “RT” is simply Twitter shorthand for “retweet”.

However, the coders at Twitter have developed a more streamlined system now that retweeting is fully supported by the Twitter website. this new system has not rendered the old style obsolete however, so it is still possible to retweet in the traditional style for those occasions where adding a comment to the message is needed.

How to Retweet from the Twitter website

Because there are now two versions of the retweet function, there are two ways to retweet from the Twitter website. the simplest way is to use the new, hard-coded retweet function developed by the Twitter coders. this will do all the retweeting with one click of the mouse.

When a user moves their mouse pointer over any tweet, the background will darken and two options will appear after the tweet, to the lower-right: reply and retweet. Clicking on the retweet option brings up a confirmation box and once “yes” is selected, the message is automatically retweeted.

The traditional method is slightly more long-winded. Here the user copies the text of the original tweet into the “what’s happening?” box at the top of the website and pastes it as if making a new tweet; then adds “RT” and the “@username” for the original Twitterer to the front of the message.

The message may need a little trimming to fit into the 140 word limit with this method but it does have the advantage that a new comment can be added along with the retweet, if desired. the new method requires comments be added in another tweet.

How to Retweet using TweetDeck

TweetDeck is one of the most popular applications to make Twitter more user-friendly but it handles retweets in a slightly different manner to the website. to retweet in TweetDeck, move the mouse over the picture beside the message to be retweeted. this will bring up the options menu for that tweet; which comes in the form of four symbols.

Click on the “right arrow” symbol (which is the one in the bottom-left) and TweetDeck will bring up two options: “Retweet now” and “Edit then retweet”. the “Retweet now” option is the same as using the new retweet function on the website: once clicked, it retweets the message and any comments will have to be made in a separate message.

The “Edit then retweet” option is the traditional method for retweeting messages. TweetDeck will place a copy of the tweet into the edit box, complete with “RT @username” already in place. the tweet can then be edited for length or added comments before being sent in the normal manner.

Although it can seem difficult at first, retweeting is a simple process that helps to streamline the information-sharing process on Twitter. the different methods have their advantages and disadvantages but with practice, the value of each method will become obvious very quickly.

Measuring Tweets

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010


As a member of the Twitter analytics team, part of my job is to measure and understand growth. The graph above tells a story of how we’ve grown over the past three years in terms of number of tweets created per day. please note that tweets from accounts identified as spam have been removed so the counts in this chart do not include spam.

Folks were tweeting 5,000 times a day in 2007. by 2008, that number was 300,000, and by 2009 it had grown to 2.5 million per day. Tweets grew 1,400% last year to 35 million per day. Today, we are seeing 50 million tweets per day—that’s an average of 600 tweets per second. (Yes, we have TPS reports.)

Tweet deliveries are a much higher number because once created, tweets must be delivered to multiple followers. then there’s search and so many other ways to measure and understand growth across this information network. Tweets per day is just one number to think about. We’ll make time to share more information so please stay tuned.

Shelton deletes Twitter app from phone

Monday, March 15th, 2010

NASHVILLE — Blake Shelton seems to be coping well after his recent breakup.

The country star ended his committed relationship with Twitter about a month ago by deleting it from his phone.

“After I guess almost a year of being on Twitter, about three weeks ago I woke up one morning, and I was looking at it like I did every morning, and I said, ‘Man, I’ve got to move on with my life. I’m addicted to this stuff.’ I can’t think in the morning because all I can do is get on there and think, ‘All right, I’ve got to think of something funny to say to start this day,”’ he said in a recent interview.

Shelton, 33, significantly raised his profile over the past year through his colourful participation on Twitter. the day he deleted the mobile app, Shelton had over 76,000 followers.

“I think people are so used to country artists, celebrities, just kind of playing the middle and really not being themselves out of fear, that it was refreshing to them to get on Twitter and see well Blake Shelton wrote, ‘Oh my god, I got so drunk last night I think my liver exploded . . .,”’ he said. “They’re going, ‘This guy is crazy. I can’t wait to see what he’s going to write next.’ Over time they realized, ‘Man, all the guy is doing is joking around.”

Shelton has found himself in the post-breakup grey area. he still tweets but it’s not as convenient or as often without the mobile application. since the release of his “Hillbilly Bone” album this month, his followers have actually increased to over 80,000, thanks, in part, to the success of the album’s title track.

The “Hillbilly Bone” duet with longtime friend Trace Adkins is currently a top-five country hit, and it’s nominated for the Academy of Country Music Awards’ vocal event of the year. the collaboration came naturally. Shelton’s friendship with Adkins goes back to the early 2000s, when they both had hair longer than their shoulders.

“He’s one of the first guys I met that I felt like was not only a great guy, but genuine. Anytime he would talk to me, he would talk to me in a way that I felt like he had my best interest at heart, because I was a new guy when he was probably on his third or fourth album,” said Shelton. “He was somebody I could call any time I had a question about the industry and ask him, ‘What would you have done here or there?’ he was just somebody I could talk to like a friend.”

Shelton couldn’t be happier with the direction his life is going right now. “Hillbilly Bone” album debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200, his relationship with girlfriend and fellow country star Miranda Lambert is solid, and after getting a divorce in 2006, he’s finally open to the idea of marriage again.

“Miranda and I have been together, it’s getting close to five years now,” he said. “We’ve had our good years and our bad years and our really bad years. But I think right now, she and I have a stronger relationship than we’ve ever had, even in the early times when it was new and exciting, it still didn’t feel like it feels right now. We’ve been through a lot together, and we’ve toughed it out. It’s exciting to me.”

“Probably for the first time I can realistically say, I can see us being together forever,” he added. “I can see us getting married one day, maybe, where before you would never have gotten me to say something like that. As far as I’m concerned we’re definitely closer than we’ve ever been to maybe taking that step.”

On the Net: blakeshelton.com

twitter.com/blakeshelton

Twitter Prank Madness – Food Media – - CHOW

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

It was only a matter of time before people started to prank the big-name food Tweeters. this week, there was a minor frenzy in Tweetsville over the mash-up entity Ruth Bourdain (ruthbourdain), as well as the surfacing of Tweets by a mysterious Jasper Slobrushe (JasperSlobrushe), who mocks prominent SF-weird-ice-cream-flavorist Humphry Slocombe. Could it have been Humphry Slocombe’s 300k Twitter followers that sent Jasper over the edge?

Posted on Friday, March 12th, 2010 by Roxanne Webber in Food Media | 1 Comment
More like this: anthony bourdain, humphry slocombe, jasper slobrushe, pranks, ruth reichl, ruthbourdain, twitter

Microsoft: Fable III will not feature Twitter integration [update …

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

Microsoft: Fable III will not feature Twitter integration [update]

by Richard Mitchell { Mar 11th 2010 at 1:52PM }

Update: Microsoft has assured Joystiq that Twitter is not going to be integrated into Fable III. according to Microsoft, “what Peter meant was he was inspired by the ‘followers’ mechanic on Twitter, and its influence can be seen specifically in the ‘Follower’ feature [of Fable III].”Original: “Fable III Twitter integration revealed”

During his panel at GDC 2010, Lionhead’s Peter Molyneux revealed that Fable III will include some form of Twitter support. Molyneux discussed the game’s experience system, noting that the most important thing in Fable III is to acquire followers. We’ve heard that before, but then Molyneux said he was going to give the audience a “clue” about a new feature, but that he wasn’t allowed to say more. said Molyneux, “I Twitter now and, you know, I’ve got followers on Twitter. That’s an interesting mechanic, and we integrate that into the Fable experience.”

True to his word, Molyneux didn’t drop any further hints, but considering that followers are akin to experience points in Fable III, we’re assuming @conanobrien will soon rule us all.

Five insights into the behaviors of social media users

Friday, March 12th, 2010

We do a decent amount of social media coverage here at Ars, but not everything that happens with Facebook, Twitter, and the like is worth its own story. Sometimes, though, we happen across things that make us say “huh, that’s interesting.” It turns out there are a lot of things we thought we knew about social media users, but not all of them are true. Here are a few tidbits we gathered that may surprise some of you.

The majority of Twitter users are still just voyeurs. according to a recent report from Barracuda Labs (PDF), nearly three-quarters of Twitter users have tweeted 10 or fewer times during the lifetime of their accounts, and a third of all Twitter users have never tweeted even once. This doesn’t mean those people have all abandoned their accounts though. 80 percent of all Twitter users follow more active tweeters no matter how active they are themselves (we’re looking at you, Nate Anderson!). In fact, nearly half follow more people than they have followers.

These numbers are actually getting better over time, though. Barracuda’s report says that 37.1 percent of all users had no tweets in June of 2009—that number is now down to 34 percent. overall, users are tweeting more, even though most still prefer to lurk in the shadows.

Mobile social networking is for the ladies. Social networking in general is exploding in popularity in part because people can do it while on-the-go. Twitter, Facebook, Google’s various apps, Foursquare, and more all have mobile applications for the popular smartphone platforms and people are eating it up. however, according to Nielsen, women seem to use their phones to participate in social media more than men.

55 percent of women use social networks while mobile, compared to 45 percent of men. sure, it’s not a huge difference, but it’s enough to wonder what’s holding back the guys? Additionally, Nielsen noted that most people think of social networking as a kid thing, but the 35-54 age group was the most likely to post updates from their phones at 36 percent. (The next largest group was 25-34, at 34 percent.) We’re going to guess that the reason these two groups came out in front is because they’re the most likely to have secure jobs that allow them to buy cool stuff like smartphones.

More more more! Surprise! More Internet users are participating in social media as time goes on. according to an NPD Group report from November, 37 percent of its respondents reported having visited a social networking site over the last six months, an increase of 11 percent year-over-year. Similarly, 63 percent reported having text messaged, an increase of 7 percent YOY.

On top of that, Nielsen saw 5.2 percent growth in people watching video online as of January 2010. This included sites like YouTube, Hulu, MTV, and others known for their video hawking capabilities, but also included traditional social media sites that are expanding into video, such as Facebook and Windows Live/Bing. Disney Online was the fastest growing month-over-month, followed by Facebook.

Facebook users are fans of traditional media. This seems unintuitive for your average social media user, but according to recent data from Hitwise, Facebook users in particular tend to favor broadcast and the websites of print media (like the Wall Street Journal or New York Times) over ‘Net-only sites.

The most popular site visited immediately after Facebook was apparently the Weather Channel (hey, I get it, we all like to know the weather), followed by CNN. the New York Times theorizes that it could be the water cooler effect at work—users discuss news they find online on Facebook and end up clicking through from friends’ pages to read more, and traditional media has an advantage in being well-known and well-trusted.

Social media isn’t replacing real life just yet. It’s a common complaint from Luddites and older adults that kids these days are living their lives online with no real-life social interaction. they may be talking to people less than their parents were at the same age, but a report this month from the Retail Advertising & Marketing Association (PDF) shows that social media users of all ages are still spurred to check things out online as a direct result of face-to-face communication.

“Despite the influence of social media among those who use it, the value of face-to-face communication remains high,” reads the report. “Even though email and cell phones have changed the way people communicate, a large majority of respondents in all age groups contend that face-to-face communication is more likely to trigger an online search than any social network.”

00:04 Fable III does not use Twitter (0)

Friday, March 12th, 2010

During the GDC 10 conference today, Lionhead’s Peter Molyneux hinted that Fable III could include some form of Twitter support. Molyneux discussed the game’s experience system, stating the importance of having followers.

Within minutes many gaming news websites posted a wave of information on how “Fable III becomes more Sociable” for instance, and some with a more direct approach “Fable III exp will be posted on twitter” – well, unfortunately it is not true and not all games are as sociable as ‘Blur’ which does include such a system.

“I Twitter now and, you know, I’ve got followers on Twitter. That’s an interesting mechanic, and we integrate that into the Fable experience.”

If like many of us, you scour the news websites looking to feed yourself with as much information on gaming as your brain can handle you are bound to have encountered this news. Whilst we don’t take pleasure from issuing disappointment, Microsoft confirmed with Joystiq to confirm that Twitter will NOT be integrated into Fable III. according to Microsoft, “what Peter meant was he was inspired by the ‘followers’ mechanic on Twitter, and its influence can be seen specifically in the ‘Follower’ feature [of Fable III].”

So there you have it!

Conan O'Brien's lone Twitter followee becomes a star

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

By Nick Allen in Los Angeles
Published: 10:15PM GMT 10 Mar 2010

Sarah Killen’s life has been turned upside down by the stunt. last week she had three Twitter followers, now she has 20,000.

Her new-found popularity also means she has been given a new computer and offers of help paying for a dress and drinks for her wedding in September.

O’Brien, the former “Tonight Show” host, left NBC in a deal that barred him from TV appearances for several months.

He has taken to Twitter to reach the masses during his exile and has amassed more than a half-million followers.

But he had not been following the feeds of anyone else and decided to change that by picking one person.

O’Brien posted: “I’ve decided to follow someone at random. She likes peanut butter and gummy dinosaurs. Sarah Killen, your life is about to change.”

Since then Killen, who lives in rural Michigan, has picked up followers at a rate of 150 per minute and been inundated by requests for media interviews.

She said: “It’s totally nuts.” her fiance John Slowik Jr said he now wants O’Brien to be best man at the wedding.