Twitter Basics presentation for Washington Women in Public Relations (WWPR) on August, 27, 2009 by Debbie Friez, vice president, BurrellesLuce and vice president, WWPR. Description of Twitter, how to sign-up for Twitter, and basic how-to's.
1. Getting Started on Twitter Presenter: Debbie Friez, Vice President Major Accounts, Burrelles Luce and Vice President, WWPR Twitter: @dfriez Hashtag: #WWPR
Started as a way to connect via phone texts messages, which are limited to 160 characters. They limited it to 140 to account for the usernames. So, keep your user name short.
I first learned of the Mumbai terrorist attacks via twitter. When I have a new blog post I put it on Twitter, so my followers can check it out. Customers service cos—Zappos, Comcast, Southwest Airlines, Jet Blue…
Different from Facebook, that if you don’t protect your updates, anyone can see them. Many people will not follow you without a completed profile
How to search using twitter What is being said about you, your company, or your interest? Do a basic search on your Twitter home page Go to search.twitter.com Paid services-BurrellesLuce, Radian6…. Use favorites to save Tweets and Tweeps you want to pay attention to Hashtags.org
How to add a background
You can also set-up to tweet by sending a text to a particular number. To use set-up the texting function – go to settings and then devices.
Click on the apps link at the bottom of your Twitter home page for additional aps.
TweepSearch-bio and profile search Tweet Grid Tweet Meme (meem_-search re-tweet– allow you to put a retweet button on your blog Tweet Deck Seesmic-iphone and desktop ap—pay and for fee
Twalala.com —Get ready to take control of your twitterstream. twalala is a client for Twitter that allows you to control what you see , and more importantly, what you don't see in your twitterstream. Using twalala , you can filter tweets out of your stream by keywords and phrases or mute individuals who get a bit too chatty. Finally, Twitter with a mute button. TwitterSnooze- -If you want to login and see who you have on snooze without snoozin' someone new, then leave the "who are you snoozin'" field empty. Why use TwitterSnooze...? It's a good tool to avoid a blast of tweets from a conference you are not attending... just snooze the conference goers for a few days. It's a nice way to get back at someone for saying something stupid... give them the silent treatment ;) It's a good way to ignore someone that just flooded your timeline for no good reason... but it was just a one-time offense and doesn't merit permanent unfollowing. Who shouldn't use TwitterSnooze...? As Dave Winer points out , TwitterSnooze is not ideal because when a person is unsnoozed, Twitter will send them an email alerting that person that you are now following them again. This is an unfortunate side-effect of the only way I know to implement a "Snooze" feature (by unfollowing and then re-following a user) given the current API. If you don't like your snoozers getting alert emails, then TwitterSnooze is not for you. Security Note: TwitterSnooze stores passwords on the DB. TwitterSnooze deletes all passwords once they are no longer needed, but if the idea of your password being stored on this server makes you squeamish, then TwitterSnooze is not for you. If you use TwitterSnooze, I highly recommend sending this someecard along with your snooze. Lifestreaming — Posterous.com is the dead simple way to put anything online using email. We launched in July 2008 and we've been steadily growing and adding features. We love sharing thoughts, photos, audio, and files with our friends and family, but we didn't like how hard it was... so we made a better way. That's posterous. We're super excited to see what happens when blogging becomes as easy as email, and we hope you enjoy posterous as much as we do. Thanks for trying it.
Remember, Twitter is a conversation. Ask questions; don't just pontificate. What part of 140 characters do you not understand? Remember the limitations. Some things are better left unsaid. So avoid stream-of-consciousness-blogging via Twitter. Transparency is vital - just as with any other social media. Consider quality vs. quantity. Many users provide links to interesting articles, information. Use proper grammar. If people follow you, it's polite to "follow" them back. However, because of that, be careful about adding too many people at one time -- that's the Twitter version of spamming. People will think you're trying to sell or hype something rather than start a conversation. It's really all about the art of conversation. http://rob573.blogspot.com/2009/07/twitter-etiquette-10-simple-rules.html
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