How to get on well with Twitter - by Roz Morris
I had to be dragged to Twitter by the scruff of my tail. I had a blog - wasn’t that enough? Wasn’t Twitter just a means of wasting time?
I soon saw it was a fantastic move. A couple of days in, my blog visits trebled. If your blog is like your writing salon, until you’re on a network like Twitter you’re talking at a closed door.
And blogging aside, Twitter is a terrific tool in its own right. Half your job as a writer is making contacts; on Twitter you can do that without ever going to a meeting, a group or a launch.
And blogging aside, Twitter is a terrific tool in its own right. Half your job as a writer is making contacts; on Twitter you can do that without ever going to a meeting, a group or a launch.
So those are the professional platforming reasons to tweet. But Twitter is not a pitching party or a careers fair. It’s not your blog. No one has to follow you, read your tweets or pass on your news. Although you can bumble up uninvited, it’s as easy to buzz people off as it is to make friends.
1 The 80:20 rule - What do you tweet? Obviously you want to draw attention to your posts or books, but tweet others’ posts, books etc far more than you tweet your own. No one minds if you go promo-mad at times of excitement, such as launches or if you get a new review, but some people hammer away with ‘my book is marvellous’ day in, day out, excuse or no. When you do mention your book, introduce it gracefully - eg ‘read the first 15 pages of The Erring Cupboard here’ - which doesn’t leave the reader feeling hectored.
2 Make tweets interesting. Don’t put ‘Interesting post http:whateverblog.com’. What’s it about? What made YOU find it interesting? Twitter’s about contact and personality. Write a headline of your own, or at least put the post’s headline: ‘Why Twitter isn’t trivial’. And not every tweet has to be a link. Be a person. Ask questions. Some folks start each day with a hello to whoever is out there. Trivia is fine if it’s engaging; Twitter is sometimes about putting a hand out and seeing who waves back. Be spontaneous. Be surprising. Be silly.
Let him do his own tweeting |
4 Not too much, not too little. Everything comes out on the tweet stream instantly. When I started I thought I was doing the right thing by putting up a burst of tweets, but that makes you look as though you’ll deluge people. Conversely, if the last time you posted was two weeks ago a potential follower may assume you gave up.
5 Find a scheduling service to spread your tweets out. You want to keep a steady presence, but you don’t want to be a slave to it. I use Hootsuite (which is, like Twitter, free as air). Other options are Tweetdeck and SocialOomph. Then I hop back to see if anyone has responded to them, or if I can natter to other people who are interesting.
6 Credit others. When I retweet a post, I include the name of the original writer (searching for their Twitter handle if necessary) AND the handle of the person who passed it to me. There are two reasons. As a journalist I feel it’s unprofessional not to credit sources. Reason 2: Twitter tells you if someone has mentioned you. If you mention another tweep’s handle, they see - and thus they might become interested in you... another tweep’s wings just flitted through your heavens. (More on Twitter handles here from my friend Porter Anderson at the blog of agent Rachelle Gardner.)
7 Don’t start a tweet with @name unless you only want it to go to the people who follow them and follow you. That’s usually a very small set. But put a magic full stop in front of the @ and you will tweet it to all the people who follow them PLUS THE people who follow you. Big difference.
8 Although you want your content to go viral, do not include the words ‘please RT’ or ‘worth the RT’ unless your tweet is for urgent humanitarian reasons. I’ll work out for myself if I want to RT.
9 Don’t tweet as the character from your book. Would you follow that if I did it? Some publishers are telling writers to do this - but this advice has usually come from consultants who haven’t a clue. One Big 6 publisher I know had Twitter training with such an expert, who neglected to tell him the stuff in point 7 about @s and full stops.
10 As this is a conversation, I leave point 10 to you. In the comments or on Twitter :)
Thanks for the pics James G Milles topgold Daquella Manera
Roz Morris is a bestselling ghostwriter and book doctor. She blogs at Nail Your Novel and has a double life on Twitter; for writing advice follow her as @dirtywhitecandy, for more normal chit-chat try her on @ByRozMorris.
Her books are Nail Your Novel: Why Writers Abandon Books And How You Can Draft, Fix and Finish With Confidence, available in print and on Kindle
She also has a novel, My Memories of a Future Life available on Kindle (US and UK) and also in print. You can also listen to or download a free audio of the first 4 chapters right here.
Comments
Dan - you put your finger on it, and as you so rightly say the people who do this rarely reciprocate. Which seems to me like bad manners.
John - perhaps you should tweet as a white butterfly...
Sheridan, Jan - thanks!
Thanks for the wonderful post on Twitter etiquette.
My numbers have grown all of a sudden. The only different thing I've been doing is connecting with others more, and RTing whether they ask or not. And yes, "please RT" is needy and desperate sounding.
I also don't follow back anyone who labels themselves as an "Internet marketer" (which equals "spammer" in my experience.) I'm a writer, so I only follow other writers or people related to the publishing industry in some capacity.
As a result of these policies, my incoming Tweet stream is mostly useful and interesting stuff that I can happily read and re-tweet. Your tweets definitely fall into that category, although I follow you in 500 other ways too!
I like to actually engage with people on Twitter, but there's very few who do. Sometimes it seems as if there's a lot of people shouting into a vacum and no one is listening. I have a separate colum on Tweetdeck for those who talk to me, so I don't miss their tweets.
Lucy Coats @lucycoats
@Louise - interesting about your experience with follower numbers. The polar opposite is the marketers who appear in my inbox as a follower, then appear all over again a few days later - obviously having unfollowed and tried again. If they just tweeted and said hello it might be more effective.
@Daniel - hello! I tend to steer clear of the marketing people too. I know I need to learn about marketing, but I never found a Twitter internet marketer who wasn't like a motivational bullhorn. And thank you for all the followings...
@Julia... :) Thanks for commenting anyway
@Richard - also for the yanks: in UK English, a period is either a slice of time or a womanly inconvenience. Thus we prefer not to Americanise this particular piece of punctuation.
@Jillian - so glad Porter sent you here - a tweep of immense wisdom
@Victoria - oh my, the #ffs (and #wws). When I first started tweeting I was so excited to see myself mentioned that I RTd my own great lists of thanks - because I didn't want to seem ungrateful. I soon learned....
@Tahlia - I have the same problem and the only possible way I can solve it is by scheduling. And I keep lists to make sure I can see a wider selection of people than just the ones who've got recent tweets.
@Jaxbee - thanks! Tweeting while biking is smart. I recommend Hootsuite if you do decide to spread them out more
@Lucy - that's a lovely point about jumping in. We can do that on Twitter because unlike in real life, it's not noticed if someone ignores you or you say the wrong thing. Twitter is perfect for the shy.
I don't spend as much time on twitter as I "should" but I do daily stop by -- I know I need to find a way to organize things into "lists" or whatall to help me scan my interests, but my interests are all over the place *laugh!* Science, writing, books, vodka, fitness, food, people, animals -- lawd be!
Catherine, Kathryn gets away with vodka and fitness - you have nothing to fear.
(Disclosure: mostly, I don't tweet. When I do, it's a dratted displacement activity.)
Great post, and I agree fully.
The desperation to be noticed, as a solitary artist, does sometimes push you to do things you wouldn't do in public. You wouldn't walk around a cocktail party handing out cards with links to your blog or book and nothing else. Same rules apply in life as in Twitter and Facebook. You have to play nice, talk to people and wait till they ask about you before you foist your opinions or CV on them.
I sound like I've always known this (and I try and give that impression) but I learned my Twitter etiquette the hard way. When I started I was tweeting incessantly about my work for days on end and getting zero responses. It was exhausting and frustrating. Fortunately for everyone concerned I wised up. Now my Twitter followers are growing steadily and naturally.
It's a paradox but true that you can get attention as long as you are authentic, do good work, and act like you don't need it.
And it's odd but my Twitter followers started growing again when I wasn't checking the numbers every five minutes. It's not about numbers, it's about talking to people like they are another person and not a notch on your belt.
Thought provoking post! Thanks so much for sharing.
Phil
It's all valid - your post AND comments. I don't have a thing to sell right now, so maybe I still see Twitter as a fun thing. When I'm watching tv, I comment and that's just my way. Just natural stuff to twat (as OH says) about! I hope I always retain that.
I have found friends on Twitter from as far away as America and, even nearer to home but still *far*, Scotland, who I might never have "met" or "spoken to" otherwise.
Between your website and Nicola Morgan's book "Tweet Right", I have learned what is okay and what is not! And it all makes good sense.
On the whole, I follow back but, one glance at someone's crazy self-promoting tweet stream tells me that I probably need *not* follow!
At the moment, I've worked out I've made an average of 16 tweets a day since I rejoined in November. These are rarely self-promotion - I almost feel embarrassed about mentioning I have a new blog post amongst all these various "greats" :)))
Loved the post and soooo agree!
Phil - hello there! We all did clumsy things at the start - scroll up the comments for my confession about hamfisted #ffs and #wws! If any of you are wondering what those are, you're best not knowing.
Tessa - another 'old friend' it's lovely to see from the ethersphere! Which just goes to illustrate what you've said - Twitter, blogs etc are all about relationships first. Create a relationship and we're all naturally interested in each other's creative work.