March 10th, 2009

Here is yet another article that supports big businesses using Twitter.  In my book I go into great detail about using Twitter to build your brand and here is some more confirmation.

From the Business Journal

Online retail giant Amazon.com is boosting its use of Twitter, the popular micro-blogging service, to get the word out about product deals and services.

Amazon appears to have started using Twitter in 2007, and has attracted thousands of followers to updates on its MP3 digital music service, product deals and video game offerings. In recent months, Amazon has made new forays into Twitter, setting up accounts for its payments service and wishlist feature.

It’s unclear how much web traffic and revenue Amazon is deriving from Twitter. But Seattle-based Amazon is part of a growing list of companies, including Comcast, Dell, Starbucks, and Whole Foods, that are experimenting with the service to build buzz around products and drive web traffic and sales.

Ben Weisman, digital director for the New York office of marketing agency Iris Nation, said Amazon is “absolutely on the front lines” of using Twitter and said the online retailer needs to have a presence there to stay connected to its online user base.

“It’s important for brands to take a look at where their user base is and engage them because if they don’t, someone else will,” said Weisman, who specializes in social networks.

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Twitter allows users to send text-based updates, known as “tweets,” and read the tweets of others. The short, 140-character updates can be sent via mobile phone or the web.

Twitter, which is a free service, has attracted legions of users but is still trying to work out a revenue model.

Amazon’s relationship with Twitter goes deeper than just marketing. Amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos was an early personal investor in Twitter through his private firm Bezos Expeditions, and Twitter uses Amazon’s web service S3 to store user profile photos and back up data.

Amazon spokesman Craig Berman confirmed some of the Amazon Twitter accounts, but declined to provide additional details, saying that “we are constantly experimenting with ways to make it easier for customers to find, discover and buy anything they may want on the internet.”

A number of Amazon employees, including Chief Technology Officer Werner Vogels and Web Services Evangelist Jeff Barr, are also heavy users of Twitter.

If Amazon, Starbucks and Whole Foods are using Twitter to build their business brand shouldn’t you?  If you are just now learning about Twitter and wondering if it’s for you, check out the new  eBook “How & Why to Tweet” From the Twitter Fairy.  It’s a comprehensive how-to guide that teaches not only how to get started on Twitter but also how to build the YOU brand and how to avoid the “Kiss of Death” .

What say you?  How do you think Businesses should brand themselves on Twitter?

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February 28th, 2009

Twitter Grader is a great site to see how you are growing in the Twitterverse!  I have some great tricks on how to use TwitterGrader in the book.  I have been having problems loading the site lately, still not loading after 4 minutes of waiting.  I guess there are a lot of tweeters out there looking for their grade.

Today my Twitter Grade is 99.93 and I am #16 on the San Diego Elite list, up from #49 last week.  What is more important to me though is my influence and how others view me in the Twitter World.

Getting graded can be an ego boost if your scores and position continually grow.  One of the best things to do for your own records is to take a screenshot when your just starting out and then compare it on a weekly or monthly basis to see if your growing.  If your not, well then you need to make some adjustments.

twittergrader2-25

This was on 2/25/08 and today its up to 99.93 - just two days later!  Follow Friday always helps my grades on sites like these.  There are some pretty controversial debates going on as to whether you should grade yourself or not.  Some people hate the grading sites and others enjoy them (like me).  TwitterGrader does NOT grade you on the number of followers you have.  There are many factors that go into grading your site.  The ratio of followers to unfollowers is important as well as the quality of those followers, the quality of your tweets and much more.

If you are hoping to use Twitter as a marketing tool by building relationships with other tweeters then your own credibility as a tweeter is important, therefor you should keep an eye on your grade. IMHO

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