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If you have books to promote consider creating your own hashtag when talking about it. This. way you create your own board of posts where when people want to check out stuff about your book all they have to do is type in or click on the hashtag.
Follow people who follow you and be weary of who to follow if they don't follow you. Don't follow people who don't have a picture and don't follow people who have more followers then people who are following them, these are spammers and those who tend to boost for no reason.
Finally, Retweet often if you find others content to be useful. It may not seem like much but it's a nice gesture that goes along way.

Been out of pocket all day. See a lot of answers. Thanks, guys and gals. Will try to digest and act on this this weekend. be expecting if you invited me to ask questions that I will. Oh, I am @MorrisEGraham
Thanks again.
Morris
Thanks again.
Morris

I have learned a few things that have proved helpful:
(1) I use lists to follow the few accounts that I would like to keep track of on a regular basis. This eliminates a lot of spam.
(2) If one receives really objectionable tweets, one can block the sender. These can come by retweet and so I'm not even a follower of the originator.
(3) In my limited experience, tweets are most useful for guiding interested subscribers to other content such as a blog.
Thank you for your twitter handles. I think I managed to follow everyone on this thread so far. Mine is @PeterKazmaier

Thanks!
Martin wrote: "I also recommend using https://hootsuite.com/ to do your twitter posts. It allows you to easily shrink links and post to several places all at once link Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and more. My tw..."
I tried that for Facebook and Twitter, but found it didn't do so well for Google+, which is the main reason I wanted it.
I tried that for Facebook and Twitter, but found it didn't do so well for Google+, which is the main reason I wanted it.
Hey, lets use this for a follow for follow thread. I'll follow everyone tomorrow.


Okay, now following everyone on this page. Will digest information in the posts this week,; I've been crazy-buzy lately, but am taking this subject/post very seriously.

Follow other authors. RT for RT...it helps spread your marketing posts further. Follow, find, but check out people without blindly following.
And somebody somewhere said tweet about more than just your book. Tweet the process. Watching something on TV? Live tweet. I do that with my etsy twitter with cooking competition shows.
It will start off slow but will mushroom out. I'm balancing 2 twitter accounts and sometimes followers for both interlap.
Somebody might argue with this one but if you feel like taking a social media break one day, take it. It's better, in my opinion, to take a break than get boggled down, frustrated, and annoyed at the sytem.


With Twitter, I primarily retweet interesting things that relate to my interests and brand (science-y stuff, mostly) and I mention blog posts, etc that may be interesting. Occasionally I'll tweet mundane stuff, but I try not to do that too frequently.

I find Twitter a great way to promote and market oneself, if you do it right.

I added everyone to my Twitter that posted, and issued a friend request to all here.

Small following. you have over 1,000. I'd like to see what a big following is.



I've truly got a small following. Like 40 people or something.
But the thought of having to interact with it all the time just really wearies me. If I tweeted much about my non-books stuff it would be:
"Woke up, cycled to work, labored over dumb databases, came home, ate dinner, thought about writing. #AmBored"
Repeat every day.
{:S
Okay that's something a newbie would be interested in... What is the function of the hash tag?


Have followed a few here so far, will get on it :)

Have followed a few here so far, will get on it :)

I have a bunch of twitter accounts and I love TweetDeck, it keeps me somewhat sane ... LOL
To answer the questions: I don't follow people who do that true twit thing.
Hashtags are a way to group posts with the same tag. It's sort of like a keyword. I've found the best use for these is to make a hashtag for your book title. That way, anyone who's interested in your book will see what's going on with it.
I'll go add everyone now. :)

You can find me on twitter at #Thevoiceinmyhead. My twitter handle is SBHartSmith.
I would love to connect.

I don't know anything about twitter. I started using hootsuite, which I loved, then they wanted $, which I don't have :-( I am not using Tweetdeck and like it BUT I don't know what the heck I'm doing there. Help me be witty and charming! What am I supposed to do??

I don't know anything about twitter. I started using hootsuite, which I loved, then they wanted $, which I don't have :-( I am not using Tweetdeck and like it BUT I don't know..."
Mary I have been using Hootsuite for years and I also love them. I have never paid a dime. I know some of their features require a paid version but I have managed make the free version work great for my needs. Do you remember what feature you wanted that only came with the paid version? Maybe I can help.


For the love of all that is holy, NO. Whenever I get that auto response from someone I requested to follow, I delete and walk away. Google this and you will see many people feel the same way. I think you lose more potential followers than you gain.

@CobberBill
AJ, from what I am seeing you need to keep your followers engaged. Tweet them something interesting to read, or funny. Don't wait until you have a book launch to bomb them with a "Hey guys, notice my new book." Develop a relationship with them. Your presence on the internet is called your "author's platform." It takes years to build.

I use humor and a different picture with each tweet and I'm happy with the results so far. I'm getting a lot more traffic to my website and sales are picking up. Not sure if Twitter is responsible as I promote all over the place, but I'm sure it helps and it's fun!
Okay. Since this thread was started as sort of a teaching thing, how do you join/start a group?

Question: can you change your twitter handle if you want? and should it include your name so it relates to you as an author, or does it matter?
Thanks.

Question: can you change your twitter handle if you want? and should it i..."
Yes and yes. I recently changed my Twitter name based on the advice in an article about platform/branding. Initially I had it some random thing but changed it to my name @Lissa_Johnston. I had to insert an underscore since someone else was already using my name as their account. But their account is inactive so I sure wish they would close it so I could have my name back LOL. So learn my lesson and grab your name ASAP. Oh and btw changing it was a snap. Didn't have to migrate followers over or anything like that.

Question: can you change your twitter handle if you want..."
Thanks for this little tidbit ... just getting started and every tip helps ... really appreciate your sharing ...
Morris