Posts tagged ‘hashtag’

When I first started using Twitter earlier in the year, I didn’t really understand #hashtags. As a result, I didn’t utilize them. However, I’ve now started using at least one hashtag in all my tweets and my Twitter experience has improved drastically as a result. Hashtags as Keywords One simple way of thinking of hashtags is as keyword tags that help label your tweets. If you use a blogging platform like WordPress or social media sites like Flickr , you’re probably already familiar with the idea of using keywords to help tag your blog posts or photos. Keyword tags allow people to more easily find related content of interest. This is EXACTLY why you want to use hashtags — more people are likely to find your Twitter account as a result. How Hashtags Help People Find You on Twitter There at least a couple ways that hashtags help people find you on Twitter. The most basic is that in the Twitter interface, hashtags are hyperlinks. When people click a hashtag that interests them, say #twitter, they receive real-time search results of other tweets that have utilized that hashtag. Hashtags are also accessible via various Twitter APIs — there are a plethora of web apps that utilize the Twitter API like foller.me and the Twitter data visualization tool Mentionmap . Hashtags Will Improve Your Twitter Experience Utilizing hashtags not only allows other people to find you on Twitter, but also allows you to find other Twitter users who you many benefit from following. Given that many developers love playing around with the Twitter API, by using hashtags you’re also providing them with raw material to help build the next super-cool Twitter API-based app. These apps also provide yet another avenue for people to find you on Twitter. Twitip has many other neat articles on hashtags that are worth reading. For new Twitter users who may still be a little puzzled by hashtags, my hope is that re-conceptualizing them as keyword tags will help you benefit more from the one of the most interesting and useful social media tools available on the Web today. © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . Why You Should Consider Using Hashtags

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Why You Should Consider Using Hashtags

By Joi Murugavell – Follow her @joidesign A short definition of hashtags: On Twitter hashtags act as a means to create ‘groupings’ of tweets about a specific topic. Anyone can create a hashtag on twitter by simply appending # to a word (preferably a short word). Then other people who are interested in this topic look up the hashtag and ta-da all tweets about that particular topic are in one place. A recent event using hashtags brilliantly is #marketingnow. The diverse and often opposing opinions on hashtags is what makes it a powerful learning tool. Read more about hashtags and find out how to use them here . The good Hashtags are often used by companies to form a collective knowledge-base (and pats on the back) ‘in one place’. Adobe does this extremely well. Check out this example  of multiple hashtags being used to announce Adobe’s plans to open the iPhone to flash developers with its release of FlashCS5 (huge news for developers and iPhone users). In his tweet, @mszulc from Adobe skillfully uses 3 hashtags in one tweet (and even leaves character space for retweets, that’s pretty impressive!) By doing this, @mszulc adds to Adobe’s twitter knowledge base. He also added the ‘iPhone’ hashtag in, so folks who follow the iPhone tag can view the new announcement which is getting iPhone users excited it all sorts of excitable ways! The bad The bad side of hashtags is of course its best feature – ‘transparency’. A recent hashtag born out of extreme annoyance/hatred (quite funny) is #iSnack2.0 which was then nicknamed #vegefail Here, Kraft hating demons of fire exist, completely trashing Kraft’s new brand iSnack2.0. Kraft was no where to be seen putting out fires in their hashtag (they did listen and eventually pulled the name). The passion against the name was then of course transferred to their corporate hashtag #kraft, which used to have a mixture of news, comments, good stuff but is now dominated by iSnack2.0 laments. Monitoring unstable temperatures in your hashtag You can’t control what people say on a hashtag about your company. If you look at #Adobe you’ll see a mixture of comments from “yes! well done! Adobe releases flash for iphones” (which is the hot topic as I write this) to “my illustratorCS4 keeps crashing you suck Adobe!” etc. The negative and positive (temperature) in the Adobe hashtag is at a very healthy level, with more positives than negatives (at the moment). People are hashtag trigger happy, it only takes one unhappy customer to start a hashtag. For corporates, your hashtag is definitely not something you want to leave ‘on its own’ with a ‘what will, be will be’ attitude as it could quite quickly become a very large potty where you know … potty things happen. I recently bumped into a hastag about a CMS/hosting product we use to build websites. Its a fairly new, small hashtag with a current negative temperature. It was started by someone who was annoyed their email was down. Then someone else joined in and someone else etc. If you bumped into this particular hashtag now, it would seem like its your very own little corner to whinge about this particular product. At the moment it has the unfortunate building blocks of a potty (a shame, as its a brilliant product). A predominantly negative hashtag doesn’t exactly inspire you to say good things like “this is an amazing product”. A little peer pressure comes into play here too, if everyone is whinging you kinda feel a little bit out of place if you actually want to say something nice. Negativity loves company. Quick ways to plant some roses in a hashtag potty: 1) Start by telling a select group of people about your hashtag, encourage them to leave comments and get a conversation going with your hashtag, seed it with a topic. 2) Encourage your staff to use your hashtag, posting latest events, product enhancements, accolades etc 3) If you host an event, add your hashtag to your banners or simply let everyone know what it is (get lots of noise in there) 4) Ask your clients on twitter to post a short testimonial with your hashtag. Most people who are happy with you, will be more than happy to tweet about you. These are pretty simple things you can do right away, to throw a bunch of flowers in the potty mix. Hashtag potty mouths: Think before you poo At times its enjoyable to jump on the hashtag lament bandwagon. Who doesn’t like a big ol grumpy wumpy on twitter! Unfortunately, even though twitter encourages spontaneity, most of us who are not anonymous, still have to think a little before we tweet (sigh?). Probably the worst example I’ve come across was a bunch of people putting down a product they actually on-sell to their customers – not the best sales tactic is it? – #doh. Further reading How to get the most out of twitter hashtags Finding your community within a community Tools for monitoring conversations in Twitter Hashtags are dying – here’s how to save them What the hashtag – a user edited hashtag directory [image: Torley ] © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . Quick Ways to Plant Some Roses in a Hashtag Potty Related posts: Six Quick Ways to Becoming a Twitter Pariah 7 ‘Secret’ Ways To Use Twitter Search 6 Ways Twitter Can Help A Bad Memory

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Quick Ways to Plant Some Roses in a Hashtag Potty

By Trevor Dobrygoski of Twit 101 – Follow him @trevord209 Have you seen the Hangover? If not, you may want to grab the eight other people out there who haven’t and go give it a peek. Without ruining it for all eight of you, here is a quick rundown. A group of four friends go to Vegas to celebrate an upcoming wedding. After a long night of bachelor party fun, they lose the groom. The remaining three spend the bulk of the movie trying to remember what happened, find their friend and make it back to the wedding in LA. Had the guys took advantage of their Twitter account and used a few of these simple tips, many pitfalls and shenanigans from the day after could have been avoided. I am not a fan of using cliches, but hindsight is 20/20. (I’ll admit if they did use any or all of these tips, it would have made for a really boring movie.) 1. Mobile Updates Everyone is talking, texting and taking pics and video from their phone when they are out for a night on the town. Using your mobile device to take pictures of your night is commonplace. For smartphone owners posting to Twitter is super easy with apps like Ubertwitter or Tweetie. If you have a standard voice only phone you can MMS (picture message) your mobile photography to a web app such as Twitpic. Twitpic has a dedicated email address for you to send the MMS to. Here are the steps to find out where to send the MMS to: 1. Log into Twitpic using your Twitter credentials 2. Go to settings and you’ll see the email address Twitpic has created for you. 3. Copy that email address and add it to your phone. 2. Use Hashtags Using hashtags is a great way of tracking topics, events or even are sometimes used as part of an application. In the case of this party, the group could have used a hashtag like #dougsvegasparty. This could have brought all of the random tweets, pics and videos posted over the couple day period together. This could have answered some questions early on like “Why is there a Tiger in the bathroom?”. If they glanced through the tweets with that hashtag, they might come across something like this: [Mike Tyson needs better security. Got the tiger in the back of the cop car without wakin' up the champ. Back to the hotel #dougsvegasparty] 3. Timestamp If you haven’t noticed when browsing your timeline, every tweet has a time and date at the bottom. In the case of a bad memory (self-induced or not) this alone could have filled in many of the time gaps when things are a little hazy. 4. GPS Location Many of the new devices and services can put a map tack on Google Maps showing where you were when you sent the tweet; kind of like a digital  bread crumb. If you go with a location based service option (Brightkite, Ubertwitter, etc), it is dually helpful. Your tweets will be time stamped and also give you a location of your tweet. This will come in very handy when mid-way through the night when things are a little fuzzy and your updates aren’t as easy to follow. The problem with the first four solutions is they are very public. Anyone, including Stu’s girlfriend, could have followed the evening via Twitter. While this may be okay for some events, the happenings of these couple of days needed to be a little more discrete. Tips five and six will be a little more incognito yet offer some handy features. 5.  Reminders (@rtm) This one could have been a huge timesaver for the gang. If they sent a DM something like this to @rtm (Remember the Milk): [d rtm tomorrow 9am get Doug from the roof], they would have received an SMS with a reminder at 9am. All four of the guys could have had a horribly hung over drive back to LA together. If you can text your updates and DMs into Twitter, you should also receive incoming DMs. Alternatively, Blackberry and other smartphone users can get them with one of the numerous available applications. 6. Evernote (@myen) With a slogan like “Remember Everything”, following Evernote on Twitter could have helped the guys out tremendously. Evernote can be updated by texting a DM to @myen. All of the DMs can be searched for by typing DM or Twitter into the search box. You can take a quick peek at this post from the Evernote blog for more explanation (and a video). After the Vegas wedding DMs like these could have shed some light on their vehicle debacles: [d myen bought the high roller package. see Eddie before we head back.] or [d myen left the Mercedes parked on Las Vegas Blvd. Hope $4 was enough for parking]. This only scratches the surface of how Twitter can be used to remember things. Share your tips in the comments below. [image: Kevin Lau ] http://www.flickr.com/photos/kevinlau/2188869187/ © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . 6 Ways Twitter Can Help A Bad Memory Related posts: 10 Ways To Create A Community Around Your Tweetup 10 Ways To Avoid Being Sued On Twitter 10 Ways To Use Twitter For Weight Loss

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6 Ways Twitter Can Help A Bad Memory