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What Can Twitter Do For Your Small Business?

I signed up for a Twitter account three years ago, and it truly changed my life. My Twitter anniversary was on December 2nd, and I thought it might be helpful for me to explain what my goals were for the social network. Now is a perfect time to step up your game on Twitter or finally get it going with a social media strategy.

I have never had a nickname in my life, but since my name Melinda Emerson was taken when I tried to sign up for Twitter, my buddy social media strategist, Cathy Larkin @Cathywebsavvypr nicknamed me @SmallBizLady. We now know that was the best branding accident that ever happen to me. We thought it would work, since it would help people know who I was and what my expertise was as a small business start-up and business development expert.  We ultimately knew it would help me raise awareness to my book, Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months.

When you got on Twitter did you have a plan?

When I started out on Twitter I had two goals. First, I wanted to build an author platform to demonstrate my thought leadership on all things small business. Secondly, I wanted to make friends and attract my niche target customer; professional women 30+, who want to start or grow a small business.  However, Twitter provided some unintended benefits as well.

When I first when on twitter I did three things each day. I shared a helpful article on small business, I tweeted out something personal about myself, and I answered someone’s small business question. Being helpful was my intent, and it served me well.  I set up Google alerts on specific business topics so that I would always have fresh things to tweet.  Once I got the hang of it, I made sure that I shared other people’s content more than my own.

I am now, a well-respected social media expert as a result of how well I’ve built my brand. I also am an active member of the Twitter community with over 125K followers. I tell people that I work Twitter like a job Monday thru Friday.

Why Twitter works for me.

Twitter is a micro-blogging platform designed for people who need the bottom-line and not much else. In short, if you can’t say it in 140 characters or less, forget about it. If you do not know who you are trying to talk with or attract forget about it.  You need a content strategy in order to really be successful with Twitter.

In April 2009, I launched #SmallBizChat which is a Tweetchat (or Twitter Talkshow as I like to call it.) My professional background is as a television producer, so I approached my tweetchat like a TV new program.  I developed a formula.  We have an open, close and new question coming out every four minutes.  Every Wednesday on Twitter to help entrepreneurs get answers to their small business questions with #Smallbizchat.  To date, my co-host @TaiGoodwin and I have produced over 130 shows.  By the way, New York Times Small Business Blogger Jay Goltz @JaySmallBiz is my guest this Wednesday.  His topic is how to run a successful small business.  He’s been an entrepreneur over 33 years, with five businesses so I think he knows a little something about it.

Twitter has grown my @SmallBizLady consulting brand. I have gotten several coaching clients and hundred of business contacts. I have also been invited for at least 50 speaking engagements, countless blog talk radio interviews, and thanks to this blog, I have been requested to write for several publications including smallbiztrends.com, secondact.com, black enterprise and essence magazines and quoted in many articles for publications including the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Washington Post, Philadelphia Inquirer and Fortune.  I have also had several TV appearances for NBC, MSNBC, and Fox News. These opportunities came just because of the content, resources and blog posts I tweet out regularly on Twitter.

Twitter is  a great resource for a small business owners, particularly if you sell B2B or are in infopreneur.  Try it you might like it.

Do you have any other suggestions for how Twitter can help a small business?

For more tips on how start or grow your small business subscribe to Melinda Emerson’s blog http://www.succeedasyourownboss.com.

Melinda F. Emerson, known to many as SmallBizLady is one of America’s leading smallbusinessexperts. As a seasoned entrepreneur, professional speaker, and small business coach, she developsMelinda Emerson "SmallBizLady" audio, video and written content to fulfill her mission to end small businessfailure.  As CEO of MFE Consulting LLC, Melinda educates entrepreneurs and Fortune 500 companies on subjects including small business start-up, business development and social media marketing. Forbes Magazine recently named her the #1 woman for entrepreneurs to follow on Twitter. She hosts #SmallBizChat Wednesdays on Twitter 8-9pm ET for emerging entrepreneurs. She also publishes a resource blog www.succeedasyourownboss.com  Melinda is also the author of the national bestseller Become Your Own Boss in 12 months; A Month-by-Month Guide to a Business That Works(Adams Media 2010)

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How To Get Started Using Social Media To Promote Your Small Business

Every week as @SmallBizLady, I conduct interviews with experts on my Twitter talk show #SmallBizChat. The show takes place every Wednesday on Twitter from 8-9pm ET. This is excerpted from my recent interview with Liana “Li” Evans @StorySpinner who is known as the online marketing geek girl who loves all things social media! ­She has been an accomplished online marketer since 1995. She is also the author of Social Media Marketing: Engaging Strategies for Facebook, Twitter & Other Social Media.

SmallBizLady:  Can Any Small Business Use Social Media?

Li Evans: I believe that any small business can use some aspects of social media, there are many different types, it’s a matter of what’s the right fit for the business & where their potential audience is.

SmallBizLady:  What’s the biggest mistake a small business can make in social media?

Li Evans: Not setting goals and measuring what they are doing to meet those goals.  Without setting goals and measuring what you are doing, how will you know if your efforts are successful, need to be tweaked or a complete waste of your time & resources?

SmallBizLady:  Where should a small business start in social media?

Li Evans: Understanding your target demographic thoroughly because you’ll need to research where they are active online in social media to engage with them.

SmallBizLady:  Can my social media activities also help give my business leverage in search marketing?

Li Evans: Absolutely!  Although you shouldn’t just do social media for search rankings, the content you produce for your audience and customers in social media can definitely be leveraged in your efforts search marketing such as SEO.

SmallBizLady:  What issues do you hear as a stumbling block for small businesses not getting into social media?

Li Evans: Mostly that these smaller companies are afraid of what’s being said about them in the social media environments.  Since they are smaller, they tend to “hear” more one on one from customers and they are afraid that this can get amplified in social media communities.  Instead of looking at these situations as opportunities, many small businesses make the mistake of either ignoring them, or dismissing them arbitrarily.

SmallBizLady:  Can a company actually sell “things” through social media?

Li Evans: That’s a pretty tricky question, it really depends on what it is you are trying to sell.  Is it your brand, is it your reputation, or is it physical things?  It’s a lot harder to track back “sales” of a product or service to interactions in social media than it is to track back brand lift, buzz, and even sentiment.

SmallBizLady:  Can other parts of my marketing plan work with my social media marketing initiatives?

Li Evans: Certainly!  In fact I often say the “social media cannot operate in a vacuum”.  You actually need to integrate all aspects of your marketing efforts with your social media efforts.  Everything for paid advertising, affiliate marketing, email and even your offline marketing efforts should be integrated with what you are doing in social media.

SmallBizLady:  If my competition is out in social media, tweeting, on Facebook, and Myspace, should I be there too?

Li Evans: Not necessarily.  You should have those profiles secured in the prominent social media sites, but actively engaging there because your competition is there is the wrong reason to be there.  Even though they are your competition, you still might have a different audience.  On top of that, how do you know the competition is finding their engagement in the social sites beneficial?  It’s better to do the research on your own audience than worrying about your competition in social media.

SmallBizLady:  What are some of the biggest misconceptions of social media?

Li Evans: That it’s easy, quick and cheap!  The media plays up social media as this easy to implement marketing godsend that practically happens overnight, when that’s far from the reality.  What they fail to outline is that relationships take time to build, trust doesn’t come easy ad that just because it’s free to have a Twitter or Facebook account, that doesn’t mean your time is free to run the accounts.

SmallBizLady:  Is there some sort of guidelines small businesses should follow for setting up a successful social media strategy?

Li Evans: I call it the “Four Pillars of Social Media Marketing”.  The first pillar is research, without doing it you won’t know where to even start or how you should be engaging.  The second pillar is strategy, without a strategy how are you going to know what you are doing, who’s going to do it and how are they going to do it?  The third pillar is engagement.  Without engaging your strategy will be dead in the water, you can’t just lurk in social media, for your strategy to be successful in social media, you actually have to be social!  The fourth and final pillar is measurement, without measuring what you are doing, how are you going to know if what you are doing is helping you attain your success goals?

My other “guidelines” are outlined in Social Media Marketing:  Strategies for Engaging in Facebook, Twitter & Other Social Media – there’s 45 chapters chock full of good advice and guidelines any business can follow.

SmallBizLady:  Should I let my employees engage in social media?

Li Evans: How can you stop them?  That would be my question to any business owner.  When your employees leave your four walls, what they do in their own time is of course their own.  Undoubtedly they are on some kind of social network, whether its YouTube, Flickr or Facebook.  They are sharing and engaging with their friends and family. 

The question is should you let your employees engage in social media for you?  That’s a question you need to research and understand how your employees communicate currently with your customers.  It’s also about placing guidelines for your employees to understand how they should represent you in social media.  If everyone is on the same page with your message and understanding where you want to be at the end of the day, utilizing your employees in social media can actually be mutually benefiting.

SmallBizLady:  What if I don’t have a lot of time, can I still do something in social media to market my small business?

Li Evans: Sure!  Pick the most valuable channel you can and dedicate the time you have to mastering it and engaging with your audience there.  Make yourself a valuable asset to the community and pour your heart into it.  Let the community know you are real and there to help.  Spreading yourself too thin by trying to be everyone with very little time only hurts your efforts.

If you found this interview helpful, join us on Wednesdays 8-9pm ET follow @SmallBizChat on Twitter. 

How to participate in #SmallBizChat: http://bit.ly/S797e

Melinda F. Emerson, also known as SmallBizLady is a seasoned entrepreneur, professional speaker, and small business coach. Her firm MFE Consulting LLC, specializes in small business start-up, business development and social media marketing. She hosts #SmallBizChat weekly on Twitter for emerging entrepreneurs.  She also publishes a resource blog www.succeedasyourownboss.com. Her first book Become Your Own Boss in 12 months; A Month-by-Month Guide to a Business That Works was released in March 2010 by Adams Media. For more information: www.becomeyourownbossbook.com

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