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Seven Time Management Tips for Twitter

August 4th, 2009 @ 9:55 am

Categories: Workplace

Tags: Twitter, Tool, Karen Leland, ProBlogger, Dana Lynn Smith, IdeaLady Cathy Stucker, Productivity, Time Management, Joanna Higgins

Is tweeting taking over your day? Karen Leland gathers up some valuable tips and tools to get it under control.

  1. Syndicate your content automatically using Twitterfeed for tweets, Facebook’s Notes app, Blog Link on LinkedIn and other networks. Denise Wakeman at www.BizTipsBlog.com recommends using Ping.fm to update her status simultaneously across sites.
  2. ProBlogger’s Darren Rowse counsels batch tweeting (and has plenty more advice on his TwiTip blog) — put aside a block of Twitter time and write several at once, if possible. You can also schedule a time to visit sites and respond, and set a timer if you have difficulty stopping.
  3. Identify the tools that will help your productivity, but don’t get sucked into spending time assessing the latest, coolest thing. That just swallows up more time. Dana Lynn Smith recommends straightforward tools such as TweetDeck.com and twitterfeed.
  4. IdeaLady Cathy Stucker recommends HootSuite.com, a quick way of sending out interesting links to your followers and scheduling tweets. It looks particularly useful for managing several accounts and monitoring your brand.
  5. Focus on your ideal audience — who do you want to reach, and does your bio tell those people enough about you and why they should want to follow you? George Kao, the source of this tip, also offers free introductory webinars on making more of your social media self.
  6. Leland herself suggests grouping tool TweetLater, another option for scheduling automatic updates, linking together tweets and specifying which keywords you want to follow.
  7. Be selective. Those big follower numbers may look enticing, but Leland has a really valuable quote from “The Toilet Paper Entrepreneur” author, Mike Michalowicz. “You want to follow and be followed by people who are following less than 100 people themselves. Otherwise it becomes a ‘follow-fest,’ and nobody is listening.”

What do you think — got any more time-saving tools or ideas, or do you disagree with any of the ones above? Share your views below.

(Photo: digicla, CC2.0)

 
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    1

    concise

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Seven Time Management Tips for Twitter

    Great tips. I use tweetdeck to manage the process, futuretweets to set some automatic tips - but it is important to tweet some realtime tips, otherwise it looks too robotic like. I wouldn't block tweets together - if you tweet multiple times in a small timeframe, I think your followers will switch off. I find spending 5 mins a few times a day works for me - but it is important to be strict about those 5 mins.

  •  
    2

    Joanna Higgins

    08/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Seven Time Management Tips for Twitter

    Thanks and I agree about the real-time tweets -- they are the essence of Twitter and also the most fun. I've just heard a cautionary tale about the risks of tweets if sent out in anger -- http://tinyurl.com/ngcgj8 -- so your scheduled 5 mins makes even more sense now.

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