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10,000 Tweets Later. . . How Twitter Can Grow Your Personal Brand

 

I did it!  I reached the 10,000 tweet mark!  What does this mean for me, my career, Kuno and the people reading this post?  Absolutely nothing!  That’s right, pushing out 10,000 tweets only means I’ve been on Twitter long enough to push out that many tweets.  That equates to 2 years, 2 weeks, 3 days, 5 hours, 4 minutes, and 57 seconds of using Twitter. 

Inbound Marketing Tweets

How has spending all of this time on Twitter helped my personal brand?  Without going into personal career milestones, the below is a summation of how Twitter has helped me to achieve personal career goals and grow my personal brand.

  1. Provides an organized listening platform that keeps me up-to-date on the latest and greatest inbound marketing tactics while allowing me to efficiently track competitive intelligence.   This type of active listening is imperative in order to stay on the cutting-edge in the inbound marketing world and if you listen to the right sources your content will be considered cutting-edge too.
  2. Twitter is a content distribution system because it provides an infrastructure to push out and syndicate content – and it is FREE!  Every new blog post gets pushed to Twitter which accounts for just under 20% of our blog post traffic.  By actively creating thought provoking cutting-edge content your posts can be distributed to thousands of people around the world.  Thus, building and growing your personal brand.
  3. Building and growing relationships on Twitter is easy.  I have met hundreds of people through Twitter.  That doesn’t mean I have a few hundred followers.  That’s how many people I have physically met after meeting them through Twitter originally.  Your relationships on Twitter will flourish if you share other people’s content and comment on it.  Over time, this reciprocation process will create dozens of personal brand advocates that will assist you in distributing your content.
  4. Twitter can be “humanizing.” I purposefully use my own persona while on Twitter.  People appreciate when you act like a real person and have some personality rather than being that cold stuffy corporate suite.  Who likes that guy?  Don’t be afraid to be yourself.

Here's what 2 years, 2 weeks, 3 days, 5 hours, 4 minutes, and 57 seconds of my Twitter posts look like.  The bigger the word the more I tweeted it.

Tweet CloudIf you have any Twitter success stories please share.  We always hear on TV or the radio about someone ruining their career by spouting off on Facebook or Twitter, but you never hear about how Twitter or Facebook has helped someone's career.



FREE Webinar:  Building Leads with Twitter

Building Leads with TwitterThursday, January 13, 2011 @ 1PM EST, 10AM PST

Join our guest Kyle Lacy, Author of Twitter Marketing for Dummies, and the Kuno Creative Inbound Marketing team to learn how to build leads using Twitter during this free webinar.

We will be presenting some of the tactical aspects of Twitter that can positively impact your Inbound Marketing.

Inbound Marketing Webinar



Comments

Grats on the milestone, Chad, and thank you for a very good (and timely) post.  
 
Re that point #2: wow, that's pretty impressive! In case with my blog Twitter-referred traffic makes up more like 2% of the traffic. Have you seen some techniques work better than others while distributing content via Twitter?
Posted @ Tuesday, December 21, 2010 7:33 AM by Geno Prussakov
Geno: 
 
Twitter doesn't make up 20% of our web traffic. It accounts for around 8% of total traffic. The 20% number accounts for blog post traffic only.  
 
Concerning techniques to accomplish these numbers or better - It's all about building relationships that foster reciprocation with your friends. You share their content and they share yours. Over time you will not just have a large Twitter following, but rather a large following of personal brand advocates. Hope that helps. . .  
 
@CPollittIU
Posted @ Tuesday, December 21, 2010 7:47 AM by Chad H. Pollitt
Chad, thank you for your quick reply. That's exactly the technique we are using, but it seems to be yielding considerably more modest results. 
 
Of course, as I have just learned, in Google Analytics your visitors from TweetDeck are actually lumped into "direct traffic". So, chances are that our Twitter-referred traffic is actually much bigger.
Posted @ Tuesday, December 21, 2010 9:06 AM by Geno Prussakov
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