Thanks, @guykawasaki.
Great minds think alike.
I got into Twitter because I wanted to help my clients use it to market their businesses. I saw it as a way for them to get exposure without a big AdWords budget. Most of the people I serve are smallish family businesses, some more successful than others but all have seen the crunch of the current economy.
So though I was signed on as a user, I didn’t use it or have a handle on it until last fall, when I decided to use it regularly, but more than that to study it. Experiment. Research not just by reading but by doing.
Networking for me is like swimming for a fish. I’m not bragging, I’m stating a fact. I started my own business in 2001 and have sustained it through networking. I don’t advertise, or advertise very very little and I’ve never had a slowdown in workload. It’s been my experience that who you know is important. It’s also been my experience that you make the most of every opportunity granted you, no matter how small.
Story: I went to a conference once and the speaker was someone I liked innately. After the event, I found her email address, emailed her and told her how much I enjoyed what she did, told her some of what I did, and asked for a meeting. That meeting spiraled into a close friendship and working relationship that has spanned years and brought me a large amount of business. True story. I also got my internship with Axiom Marketing and Advertising because a producer hit on me at a local dive (this was college days, pre-marriage) and I asked for a contact. He was trying to impress me, so I got a contact and referral with the Creative Director. Not advocating this method, just relating what happened. (No I did not go out with him, ever, but he became a friend.)
Twitter is the biggest networking group in the world. Big chat room.
So yes, I’ve only done Twitter for a few months but let’s just say I quickly got my bearings.
Here is what I noticed. There were a lot of people in the same room shouting. Then there were a lot of people in corners having quiet conversations. I ran an experiment when I had around 100 followers, to see who was actually engaging with me, reading what I said. I stated my intent and asked for a response.
Three people replied. Three.
This made me go back and rethink my strategy.
It seemed to me that the power of Twitter, when you can’t be heard much… besides the SEO implications of your tweets…is to listen. I started to analyze why I was personally following certain people and why I was not.
I follow heroes. I follow people I know have a measure of understanding or success in their fields because this is a way to listen to them and possibly engage them. Not impress. But learn. Share ideas. I’m all about soaking up as much as I can from whatever source is out there and this was a gold mine. So I followed Andy Clarke and Michelle Miller and Richard Laermer and Duncan Bannatyne and Guy Kawasaki and Laura Roeder. The Wizard doesn’t tweet as far as I know or I’d follow him. I follow MODx developers and illustrators, creatives, David Finch…a Louisville, KY social media thought leader. Names that might not mean anything to a non-geek. Someone outside the field. To me, important. (Duncan is a businessman and impressed me on his television show) I followed several community members from Louisville. Then I followed people I might like. I ran a search on something that has always been for me, a cultural litmus test. If you passed that test in a social situation, we’d probably click well. And I added people who were tweeting on that subject. (Princess Bride movie – movies are quick ways to gauge someone’s personality) There were all types of people who came from that search and it’s been interesting to see the results. I’ve been followed and followed back people who share my political and religious beliefs. And some who did not.
Somebody said, I forget who, that in a room full of talkers, the power goes to the listener. And I’d felt that before I heard it. But they beat me to the punch in saying it.
Okay. So to this point I’ve started listening and divided people into two types…. broadcasters and engagers. These aren’t fluid types. They can change. A broadcaster might engage, and engager might broadcast. The question is, what is their normal mode? And then I saw the different motives people had with Twitter. You had some people blasting sales pitches (randomly with no context) and some people direct messaging with an auto-response. Ugh. You had teens staying connected to their posse. Housewives (funny beautiful ones) staying sane and connected to the adult world when they were surrounded by wee ones to care for. You had experts flaunting their knowledge, tweet after tweet after tweet…. constant broadcast stream. You had artists sharing ideas. You had developers sharing ideas. You had people asking for prayer, sharing stories. Writers, reporting on progress or working through plots. People voicing political agendas, people looking for a fight. Large groups of people trolling for hook-ups. Large groups of people slamming others. Then there is the usual crowd of “Names” …celebrities and the like, and Twitter is their stage.
“Names” and Average Joes seem to me to be really similar. After watching a few of them, I’m beginning to think less and less that they use Twitter differently than others, they just have to be more aware of what they are saying because obviously more people hear it.
Anyhow, I have kinda been doing all of this on my own, reading a bit but nothing intense as far as research, not wanting to be colored by other’s ideas.
So to get back to my initial statement. Yesterday I ran across something in a search for a graphic, it was a breakdown of Twitter users. Based on work by @guykawasaki. You can see it here: http://www.infographicsshowcase.com/twitter-users-profile-infographic/ I’d followed him but not really gotten a lot… maybe he was the guy who talked about listening? Or was that @garyvee? Anyhow. I was honked. He beat me to the punch. I was all excited by what I was gathering and here it is. Part of it. Just part of it.
Oh well. There are gaps here. He hasn’t gotten into some of the things I’m seeing. This is broad. I’m going to keep exploring. But now I also have to go read his freakin’ books to make sure I’m not parroting things someone else has discovered. Grouchy.
Anyhow.
The point of all of this is, for me, still to help my small business owner client grow. And after this research, I think what I’m going to be saying to my clients is simple. It’s okay to broadcast. But how you broadcast matters. Listening is much more powerful. It’s okay to have the motive of growing your business. But to stand out above a crowd of people who are self-seeking, you have to give. In a room full of posers, authenticity is shiny. There is no gimmick that leads to success. You have to be extraordinary, even if it is in only one way. One small thing even. And you can. Being consistent is extraordinary. That alone. In the Louisville market, if your market is local, Twitter has limited range. We’re not in step with other parts of the country as far as usage. There are people using it but Facebook is still much more popular here. It’s growing though. Don’t ignore it. Learn how to swim in it now so when it does hit critical mass here, you’re ready.
Check out the infographic, see who you are in relationship to it and admit that. Then define who you want to be, what your goals are. And don’t approach it like everyone else is. I think we can’t control other people but we can control ourselves. So we work on ourselves..our business, constantly seeking improvement and innovation and are honest about it. And advertising whether on social media or AdWords is about telling the truth. Should be about telling the truth. And surprising people. But my strategy for anyone wanting to use Twitter to grow a business will start first with listening and tend more toward the Maven/Mensch model. (Say that three times fast- Maven/Mensch model.)
All right. Those are my thoughts for now.
Thanks @guykawasaki.



This is very helpful. Insightful and a very good blog. Well done Anne. Most importantly, thanks for following me on twitter.
I’m honored to be included on your shortlist of people to follow!
“It’s okay to broadcast. But how you broadcast matters. Listening is much more powerful.”
Yup, you pretty much summed up everything I teach about twitter right there.