Posts tagged ‘people’

As our lives become increasingly busy we are condensing everything we do into shorter periods of time and cooking is no different. Most people lead crazily busy lives where time for cooking is at a premium but luckily help is at hand and twitter offers a variety of great ways to learn how to cook. Here are our 5 resources for cooking better food using Twitter… Rouxbe Online Cooking School @ rouxbe One of the slickest online cooking school in the world has daily video tips for you as well as handy little tips on how you can improve in the kitchen. Their blog is full of some great tips and their team of professional chefs are on hand to answer your questions when you get stuck in the kitchen. @ jamie_oliver One of the most famous chefs in the world has over a quarter of a million followers and he is constantly dispensing cooking information and will fill you full of creative ideas from his numerous Twitpics. Shares what he is eating and is a real inspiration to foodies all over the world. Twecipe This is one of the handiest tools you will ever come across on Twitter. Simply send three ingredients to @twecipe and the cute little onion will send you back a DM with a link to a recipe that matches your ingredients perfectly. You can also use the website if you want and the little onion behind the twitter account has been known to share food tips and funny food stories from around the world. @ Tastespotting One of the most stunning food websites on the planet has a vibrant and engaging twitter account that never fails to deliver equal parts inspiration and quality recipes from the world’s top food bloggers. @ simplyrecipes Elise Bauer is well known as one of the top food bloggers in the world and her recipes have fed thousand of hungry mouths around the world. Not only does her website contain an abundance of recipes but she is nearly always available on Twitter answering questions and discussing her cooking. A real angel of the cooking world who seems to be out to help everybody on the planet to cook better food! © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . 5 Ways To Improve Your Cooking Using Twitter

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5 Ways To Improve Your Cooking Using Twitter

There’s no question that social media has reshaped the way we do business online. I’ve posted a couple of times about using Facebook with clients ; however, the real power of social media lies within Twitter. Used correctly, Twitter can become an integral part of your projects from client screening to web site integration to ongoing client education and interaction. In this post I will step through some ideas on integrating Twitter with your projects and clients before, during and after the project process. Before the Project Think of Twitter as a powerful set of ears. You can listen broadly to the chatter going on or you can hone in on specific conversations. This gives you insight into what prospects are talking about, and it enables you to interact with them in a resource capacity. Connect with potential clients How can you use Twitter to seek out new clients? The first thing you need to do is banish any thought of Twitter as a sales tool. It’s nothing of the sorts. Twitter is a resource tool. You help people, follow them and converse with them, and in return they interact with you. You can ignite this relationship with prospects by searching out keywords related to web design, your geographic area or even your competitors. Some people may be explicitly looking for web design services while others may just be a connection to an organization you want to do business with. You should also look up your offline prospects on Twitter to see if you can interact with them at a new level. The key is to be there as a resource. Talk to these people. Engage them. You may never do business with them, but Twitter is a public forum and the more actively involved you are, the more visible you become. Conduct due diligence Social media has ushered in a huge amount of transparency into the online world. Employers can see what their employees are up to on Facebook, your name is at the mercy of Google’s index and you can easily be tagged on photo sharing sites. Use this to your advantage. If you’re trying to complete a deal with a prospect that actually has a Twitter presence, see what they’re up to. Dig into their past tweets to see what they post about. It may help you to learn more about their needs or it may send warning flags up. Be prepared For prospects that are not on Twitter, it may be in their best interest to join. This is where your expertise comes into play and where you need to convince the prospect that Twitter should be incorporated into their online presence. Be prepared for negative reactions. These reactions are typically easy to foresee. For example, the biggest argument against Twitter I’ve seen is that it’s just a bunch of people talking about the nonsensical stuff they’re doing throughout the day. Granted that this is a part of Twitter, it’s not an important part. The important part is where people come together to act as a resource to each other or to respond to customer complaints (or praises). By excluding yourself from Twitter, you’re excluding yourself from the conversation. That’s just one counterargument. The most effective way to convince a prospect to get on Twitter is to prepare real life examples of Twitter in use for business purposes. I constantly find myself referring to ComcastCares , a tired but usable example. Go local Tweet-ups are excellent reasons to network. In a typical tweet-up, several local Twitter users will gather in a restaurant or coffee shop to get to know each other. You never know exactly who is going to show up which makes it a great way to network with new people outside your usual social circles. The cool thing is that there are many people on Twitter who have a number of connections. Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point , would call them connectors, and one of them may just show up to the tweet-up. Make sure they know who you are. During the Project You have the client and now the fun begins. Twitter has taken on a very active role in web projects that can help your client to extend their presence even further online. Your job is to help them accomplish this. Introduce Twitter So you’ve convinced the prospect to give Twitter a shot. Don’t stop there. Keep educating them by introducing core concepts and functionalities of Twitter. You can show them desktop and iPhone applications such as TweetDeck , and explain the features of Twitter such as the newly unveiled retweet and list functions. Go from theory to hands-on Most clients can grasp the basics of Twitter but after that it becomes a blur. How exactly can they use Twitter for their web presence? You can’t just setup a Twitter account, show them a few things and then send them on their way. You have to show them hands-on how to use Twitter. Help the client form some initial ideas on what to tweet about. Chances are they’ll want to tweet about their newest sales promotion. Discourage them from posting this kind of content. The best way to get clients thinking is by helping them identify some people to follow. Once the client can see what other effective people post to Twitter, the ideas should start flowing more easily. Web site integration Integrating a client’s most recent tweets into their web presence is a piece of cake. You can use Twitter’s widget or you can deploy one of the countless third party tools that exist. Content management systems such as WordPress offer numerous Twitter plugins as well. You need to be careful when advising the client whether or not integrating Twitter with the web site is a good idea. Is the client using a personal Twitter account or is it a company branded account? If it’s personal and they’re posting questionable content, that’s when you need to think about either establishing a secondary account or excluding Twitter altogether from the web site. Status updates One unique way to think about Twitter for projects is on the status update side of things. If you establish a private account that only your client can access, you can share quick updates on the project progress. This might only work if the client already loves Twitter, but it may be worth giving a shot if you have a lot of little things you need to communicate in a timely fashion. Bare bones At the very least, if the client has an RSS feed for their blog, events, press releases or other timely content, setup a twitterfeed account . Twitterfeed will post each new RSS update as a new tweet. Even if the client isn’t interested in Twitter, then they’ll at least have somewhat of a presence. After the Project The project’s done, the site’s been launched and the client’s happy – congratulations – you’re not done. Twitter is one of those things that you need to constantly stick to in order to succeed with it. This can be hard on the client and where your expertise can continue to come into play. Continue the education Keep the client engaged with Twitter by sending them useful tips and notes on how to use it. Send them new people to follow, answer their questions and advise them on best practices. Even if you’re not being paid a consulting fee any longer, it’s still a great way to continue building a bond with a client without investing too much time. Interact You’re on Twitter and your client is on Twitter. The only natural thing to do is interact with them. Retweet or reply to anything interesting they post, and make sure you drop them a direct message every so often. Twitter is just another platform to help you communicate with clients in a new way. See how you’re doing Most small companies don’t need to worry about this, but make sure you always have a pulse on what people are saying about your organization on Twitter. Just search for your name or your company’s name. It’s not hard and you can unearth complaints, praises or other mentions worth reacting to. And if you work for a large organization, take the initiative to start engaging with clients. Maybe they’re complaining about something you never would have known about. Respond to their needs and repair the relationship. Get everyone in a room If you have multiple clients you’re educating about Twitter, take the opportunity to consider organizing a half-day seminar. You can use the seminar to cover Twitter basics, dip into advanced topics and field questions. I’ve done this before and it’s very effective. You can even charge for the seminar and turn it into a really worthwhile event. The best part is that you’re interacting with your clients in a face-to-face manner, which is very powerful. One final thought In closing this post, it’s worth mentioning one big Twitter no-no of mine. Never, ever post negative stuff about a client on Twitter. It doesn’t matter if you’re vague or careful, just don’t do it. It’s needlessly risky and unprofessional. What if the client stumbles onto your Twitter profile and sees the update? What if they figure out it’s them you’re throwing under the bus? This can lead to an awkward and precarious relationship with your client. My recommendation: Keep it safe and positive if you tweet about clients. And with that said, I’m always interested in learning about how other people use Twitter with clients and projects. Speak up! Leave a comment and share your insight. © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . How to Use Twitter with Prospects and Clients Before, During and After Web Design Projects

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How to Use Twitter with Prospects and Clients Before, During and After Web Design Projects

How do you share files on Twitter? Growing your followers means you will move beyond the people that you personally know. I’ve met scores of people on Twitter that I will never meet in real life. I also don’t have personal contact information for many of the people I know on Twitter either. So how do you send someone a file online without their email address? Surprisingly, there are at least nine different sites that can answer that question for you. From presentations to mp3s to documents to zip files and anything else, they can now be sent via Twitter. This really opens up the use of Twitter from a simple communication tool to a new way to share large amounts of information. I sat down with my co-workers and created a wish list of qualities that we as marketing people want in a Twitter file sharing tool. Of course, all the apps have to be free, easy-to-use and require no downloadable client. Beyond that, we wanted to be able to: * store at least 15 mb of data * share multiple file types: mp3, doc, ppt, zip, pictures, videos * public and private tweets * use OAuth so you don’t have to create a new account * have it self-delete after a certain amount time * share across multiple platforms The evaluation method was simple. I visited each site and registered. After my profile loaded, I took a screenshot of the interface and then spent about ten minutes looking around the site. A decent site should be able to explain itself in that time. After using the application, I rated each site against my wish list. Tweetcube Tweetcube allows you to upload zip, rar, pdf, jpg, png, gif, mp3 and txt files. Or at least it says it says it does. I could only get to step two and wasn’t able to upload anything. According to Tweetcube, you can upload as many 10 mb files as you want, and after 30 days they get deleted. Or you could if it worked. Ten megabytes seems to be the lower end of the uploading spectrum anyway. PROS: You can upload up to 10 mb, uses Twitter OAuth so you don’t have to create an account. CONS: It doesn’t work. Tried several times over two days to use the site. At first it wouldn’t let me login. After I got past that, I was never able to upload a file. RATING: Thumbsdown Tweetmojo Tweetmojo allows you to share videos, photos, files and tweets of up to 1400 characters long. There is no mention of upper size limit on file sharing and a tweet to their Twitter account didn’t get a reply. I tried uploading a 36 MB pdf and after waiting 10 minutes, nothing happened. It didn’t give me any indication that the file is being uploaded, so I don’t know if I didn’t wait long enough or if it never tried to upload the file. The Twitter OAuth didn’t work either so I could never log in to post anything to Twitter. There is also a timeline so you can see what other people have uploaded from the site. Tweetmojo does allow you to record your own video and post it from the site by using the Viddler video recorder. That is, if the sign in feature worked. PROS: Allows you to upload any file type and you can record you own videos from the site. Nice feature that allows you to add long posts without having to upload a file. CONS: It didn’t work. I was able to upload smaller photo files and record a video, but could never sign in to Twitter to use it. RATING: Thumbsdown Twitt Twi.tt gives you the ability to upload pictures, videos, documents, audio and create a poll. The screen is divided into tabs so you can select from which area you want to upload. Under each tab is a selection of options, such as upload from computer, get from website, capture from webcam or post by email. Most of the these options aren’t available yet but there is a message that it should “be added in just a few days.” You can choose between posting your file to Twitter or just putting it in the Twi.tt public timeline. There is no mention of file size or how your files are hosted on their system or for how long. PROS: Hurray, it works! There doesn’t appear to be a file size limit and a 29 MB file uploaded just fine. CONS: Most of the site’s features don’t work yet. It’s unclear what happened to your uploads after you share them. RATING: Thumbsdown TwitFS TwitFS offers a free non-account version, which is pretty good. You can upload up to 100 MB at once, you can share videos, audio, pictures and documents, and you can publish to Twitter, blogs, Facebook, MySpace, message boards and send via email. You can also store your file for 30 days, send a direct message to an individual or message everyone in your tweetstream. Once uploaded, your file gets its own page and you can share the url or embed it in another program. If you register with TwitFS, you can upload a file up to 250 MB, a file manager, a direct link to the file, parallel downloads and unlimited file storage. For a small fee starting at $0.99, you get up to 2.5 GB maximum file size. PROS: It does everything we could want from a file sharing site. It’s worth registering with the site for added features. CONS: Um….can’t find any. RATING: Thumbsup Filetwt Filetwt is another simple site. You enter your Twitter username and password, enter a 114 character message and upload a file up to 20 MB. The file then goes out on your public Twitter stream. The site creates a TinyURL that links back to a page where you can download the file. It works basically the same as Filesocial, but not as well. It also offers the ability to sign up for an account, which allows you to send private tweets, better storage and allows for creating a friend list to send files to. The friend list isn’t a complete list of your Twitter followers. PROS: Easy to use and share files with a simple one step process. CONS: You don’t get a link to your file unless you go to your Twitter stream and find the tweet. The registered version doesn’t pull in all your friends and doesn’t give you the option to add friends that are missing. RATING: Thumbsdown FileSocial FileSocial is the prettiest site of the file sharing tools. You can upload any file up to 50 MB and post it to your public Twitter timeline. The file is stored on their servers for an unknown amount of time. FileSocial sends out a message to your Twitter stream with a TinyURL. People can view your file, download it or leave a message on it. It also opens the file without having to download it. There is also a downloadable client that allows you to drag and drop files you want to share. PROS: Easy tool that allows you to share any type of file on Twitter. CONS: FileSocial only allows you to post to Twitter. You can take that URL and share it on other sites or post in an email, but you can’t do that directly from the site. RATING: Thumbsup TwitDoc TwitDoc uses the Twitter OAuth to log you into their account. You can upload up videos up to 25MB, documents up to 15MB and photos up to 10MB. I’m not sure why they are using different file sizes for each type of file. Once you’ve uploaded your file and sent your tweet, you get a TinyURL, which links to a page where you file is. It’s a simple site that gives you the ability to share files quickly and easily. There is also a downloadable client that allows you to use the site’s features from your desktop. PROS: Easy to use single function site. CONS: There is no list of all the files you upload. You can’t control the files once they are uploaded if you don’t have the URL. It doesn’t handle audio files. RATING: Thumbsdown Acamin Acamin is designed with a nod to the academic community. That doesn’t mean it’s limited to that field. You can post files to your Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn account. I tried adding a picture and was given a series of error messages before finally being told that my image was posted to my Twitter account. When I clicked on the URL to link back to the image, I got a “This file is not available!” error message. According to the icons on the page, you can attach a file to an email, publish it online, get the code to embed your file and convert it to a pdf. PROS: The ability to publish files on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, as well as being able to convert documents to a pdf file. CONS: It doesn’t work. I counted at least six error messages before the site attempted to send the file, then got another error message after posting. RATING: Thumbsdown Conclusion TwitFS did the best by ultimately having the best features. It’s simple to use, accepts the largest files and allows you to share the file across multiple networks. Best of all, it works without any problems. FileSocial is also recommended for it’s ability to view the files without having to download them. © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . 8 Twitter Apps That Make It Easy To Share Files

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8 Twitter Apps That Make It Easy To Share Files

Social Media Marketing is a kind of internet marketing done through raiding social networks such as virtual community and web logs Virtual communities like Facebook, offers beneficial memberships by giving own profiles to each user. Then profiles are frequently updated by its user through photos, videos and other personal details. This makes a hit to online users and makes a social media website much populated and occupied. Web logs, on the other hand, have a good share of population in the social network. It is the usual website being maintained personally by an individual. Both virtual communities and web logs broadens the target for a social campaign. There is an unlimited advertising possibility in this kind of marketing because social websites mushrooms rapidly and continually. Social media marketing is the process of advertising your website through any social media websites. This is a very successful tool in boosting your website's traffic easily. Crowded websites means limitless traffic. This is a good way to acquire some of it and draw it directly to you. To stand out is what all the people are after and that should also be your aim. You must think of a tactical plan to make your participation obviously exist. Do a Market research. A Social Media Marketer must know every detail from who to reach out, what product/service is being promoted, where it will be a hit and every detail that will help you strengthen your campaign. After addressing these important points, then proceed to the execution. One secret to succeed in this marketing is through your performance. Actively interacting and communicating will do wonders to your popularity. Apart from the social media marketing itself, bookmarking is an efficient technique to increase the possibility to attract visitors and build up your page rank foundation. Social bookmarking means tagging a website or deep links to create an availability and easy reference for future use. Bookmarking yourself is another way to drive floods of traffic to your website. There are different kinds of social media websites and as a marketer, it is your task to know how each works and what can you possible gain from it. Each can have advantages and disadvantages to you, so every details count. Basic knowledge of internet and how it works will also help a lot. With taking advantage of this strategy, branding and image build up will be smoothly achieved. An ideal Social Media Marketer is a person that contains many qualities, web marketer, PR, and customer service with enthusiasm. And also he must be a good listener and a good communicator. As an expert in social media, you must have the capability to decide which networks are pertinent. Social media marketing is a neck-to-neck competition so you have to our stand your competitors. Creating connections through social networks not only gives you potential buyers and consumers, it will also help your website's page rank rose. You will be more optimized by the search engines. No doubt that social media marketing is a continuous sprouting advertising strategy, therefore, making it an effective way to plug your business.

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Social Media Marketing

Managing your followers is one way to make sure your tweet stream is always relevant. One technique using ReFollow is about removing people, the other about adding. The two most important ingredients for great people to follow are: 1. Current 2. Engaging Current meaning they are still active on Twitter. With a high drop-out rate, people tend to leave Twitter and never come back. A useful way to find out who has left is to login to ReFollow and click on the top “I’m Following” and then on the top-right “No tweets in X days”. I usually choose 30 or 90 days, since not everyone is a daily tweetaholic like me. At this point you don’t have to choose “Select All” and “UnFollow”. At the very least it allows you to look over the list and realize some people that you really like or know personally haven’t been on in a while, and maybe drop them a line. The best thing about ReFollow though is finding people that are engaging with you that you may not be following. Choose “I’m not following” from the choices at the top (make sure this is the only one checked off) and then on the right hand side in the middle of the page, check the option “Users who have @mentioned me”. This will show you all the people on Twitter that have mentioned/replied/retweeted you that you are not following. I love doing this search because it shows me who is making an effort to reach out. It shows who supports me, and that makes me happy and I want to see who they are so I can possibly support them. This is a great option especially if you’ve fallen behind or don’t get notifications at all about new followers (like me). © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . Use ReFollow.com To Find The Most Engaged and Dearly Departed

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Use ReFollow.com To Find The Most Engaged and Dearly Departed

The ability to retweet on Twitter was already available and has been mostly of use to those in business situations who could take advantage of their followers retweeting their promotions. This has been drastically changed with the retweet feature now being in a simple to use button under any of your feeds tweets. You may ask yourself why you would bother retweeting more often just because of a button, and you are right to do so. After all you are just making the ones you follow more exposed to the tweeters who follow you. However this works both ways. Your tweets can also be retweeted by your followers. The new feature doesn’t just place a simple RT in front of the retweeted tweet on your profile. By being retweeted your profile picture and username appears next to your own tweet, on someone else’s page! For example today I retweeted @johncmayer and his photo and link appeared on my profile. For him this means that now all of my followers (who otherwise may not have seen his tweet) have been exposed to his content and may choose to follow him and/or retweet it again creating a ripple effect and sending his message to an entirely new audience. By being promoted by other twitter users one could potentially gain thousands of new followers. Which we all know translates to twinfluence. For social users who hover around 100-200 followers this provides an avenue for increased twitter success. It should be noted however that without interesting tweets you are unlikely to be retweeted in this new fashion so although the features are useful, tweet-quality is still king in what determines your networking success. The new feature also gives even more power to those with staggering amounts of followers already. For example @aplusk who is almost at 4 million followers could choose to retweet a message and give that person’s content access to the gargantuan amount of followers he has. For tweeters who promote their own blog or product this could be the best free advertising campaign that they ever get. Even television commercials won’t receive upwards of 3.5 million views in a matter of seconds. The sidebar on twitter now includes a section appropriately titled ‘retweets’. Within this selection there are 3 mini-sections. The 1st of which is ‘Retweets by others’ which shows what the people you follow have been retweeting. This again will give added exposure to those lucky enough to be retweeted by someone like @biz. The 2nd section is ‘Retweets by you’ which is as simple as it sounds; it lists all the tweets that you have retweeted and gives you the option to untweet those messages. The 3rd and most important section for you is the ‘Your tweets retweeted’ section. This section allows you to follow which of your tweets have been retweeted and by whom. This allows you to track your tweets and observe the spread of your content and username which is ultimately the thing that will make this feature useful to you. All of these sections also show who else has retweeted what you have. For them it means they are being exposed to others who have similar interests and for you it means that you are also being exposed to others with similar interests, others who could potentially become your newest followers. As you can see the retweet feature will change how we network and how we make connections with others on twitter. The button doesn’t guarantee twitter success but it does make it easier for those with interesting things to say. © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . How The New Retweet Feature Changes Marketing On Twitter

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How The New Retweet Feature Changes Marketing On Twitter

There are several resources available to help you make money online. It is really possible for you to be able to tap the internet and make a tidy amount for yourself. You need not be a genius in order to achieve this. Out there on the World Wide Web there are several legitimate and excellent business opportunities to help you make money online. All that you will need to do is to ferret these out. The amount that you invest in working online will be able to give you a good return by helping you make money online The first thing that you could try to do to make money online is to network and connect employers with the right employee. If you are able to get a person looking for a job to the right employer you will be able to get yourself a commission of as high as the person’s first month salary. At the same time you will be helping job seekers too. There are websites that pay you a referral fee to get together the merchant and the buyer. This will enable you to make money online by referring the right people and money will be credited into your account when the transaction is finalized. If you are a proficient writer then you can make money online without ever stepping out of home. There are several websites and blogs that are constantly looking for content. The internet seems to be a great guzzler for content and if you have the talent you will be able to make a tidy sum for yourself. Later on, once you have established yourself then you can ask for any kind of remuneration. The next thing to help you make money online could be to start your very own blog. You don’t even need to own a website or have extensive software. All that you need to do is to log on to Blogger and set up your own blog in a jiffy without even knowing anything about web design. Once the blog has been established and lots of people know about it, you will be laughing your way to the bank. Once the blog has been set up it will keep the bucks rolling in permanently. If you are an expert on a particular topic and know lots of links and resources to find the information then you can make money online by setting up a topical resource hub. You can tie up with websites that are already into this or could start on your own which will fetch you more money. Another lucrative way to make money online is to advertise other people’s products and services on your website. The moment you have your own website or blog you can earn further from it by pasting links or advertisements of products that you would recommend.

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Make money without stepping out