· Tuesday February 10th 2009 ·

Using Social Media to Become an Internet Superhero

I don’t believe in showing up early for a party (after all, it’s important to make an entrance). In a busi­ness con­text, this prob­ably isn’t the best thing in the world, and in an internet con­text, it’s even less so. For instance, I just recently started making use of Twitter. I hon­estly didn’t get what the big idea was. Then I started using it.

It’s amazing. News stories break on Twitter before the news­pa­pers even have an idea what’s going on. You can see real-time photos of Stephen Fry stuck in an elev­ator. If you com­plain about a product, its man­u­fac­turers will help you out. But most fas­cin­ating are the con­ver­sa­tions: it’s like what I ima­gine The Crysalids was like. Someone makes a com­ment about the colour of the sky, and people respond; threads of con­ver­sa­tion begin spidering off in dif­ferent tan­gents. Anyone can jump in at any point and drop out just as easily, and nobody dom­in­ates because every response is lim­ited to 140 char­ac­ters. It’s the digital rep­res­ent­a­tion of the col­lective uncon­scious­ness. And it’s searchable!

Social media, I’m sure you’ve heard, is chan­ging our world. If you’re late to the party, like me, it’s time to get involved! Rather than give you a bunch of inform­a­tion that may or may not be true, I’m going to point the way to some resources from more cred­ible experts than I.

Please note that I’m only addressing here the aspects of social net­working that I use myself or find most useful… there are a great many other tools that people are using, and there are a great many tools that will rise to the fore­front as the internet changes & pro­gresses.

Gen­eral Information

Write a blog

Everyone and their gold­fish has one. Why don’t you? Blog­ging will gen­erate more hits to your web­site, will provide your users with valu­able con­tent, and will allow you to interact with your visitors.

I can help you set up a blog and develop a custom tem­plate for it (you don’t want to look like everyone else now, do you?), along with a whole range of cus­tom­iz­a­tion options! I like Word­Press myself, but I’ve also used Move­able Type, Live­journal, Blogger, and other platforms.

Twitter: not just for twits

Twitter is the most-used “microb­log­ging” plat­form; ie, blog­ging for the lazy. It takes 20 seconds to post a microblog post, and that’s only if you’re really thinking about it.

Face­book: the work­place pro­ductivity vampire

In a busi­ness con­text, you prob­ably want to avoid posting photos of your­self doing jello shots, but oth­er­wise I’d advocate being as open as pos­sible. Any time I receive an email from a pro­spective client, I look them up on Face­book to get a feel of who they are.

LinkedIn: Face­book without the poking

LinkedIn is sort of like the pro­fes­sional ver­sion of Facebook.

Mon­it­oring Tools

Find out what people are saying about you. If they’re not saying any­thing, find people who are talking about the things you can help them with, or the com­panies with whom you compete.

Remember!

  • Keep trying! You will see an ROI, but it may not be imme­di­ately meas­ur­able. Social media is about forming rela­tion­ships, first and foremost.
  • Help out other people as much as you can to be seen as an expert and a valu­able asset to the community.
  • Be authentic and open.
  • Upload your pho­to­graph to your pro­file if you do nothing else… people will trust you about 100x more if they see a face. We react per­son­ally to a face in a way that we don’t react to words. (Same goes for your website.)
  • Interact with others–if you’re com­mu­nic­ating in a void, you aren’t communicating.
  • Respond to neg­ative feed­back instead of sup­pressing it.
  • Find your audi­ence & join them.

If you’ve any resources to sug­gest, or com­ments, please feel free to leave them!

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