Minggu, 17 April 2016

Top Twitter Technique Free Download

Do your tweets get noticed?

Are you getting enough engagement on Twitter?

Twitter’s true value is in its engagement. Unless people are engaging with you on Twitter, you’re wasting your time.

In this article I’ll share 10 tweeting techniques that lead to better engagement.
#1: Keep Tweets Under 110 Characters

Twitter’s legendary character restriction seems short, but if you’re maxing out your character count, your tweets are too long.

Shorter tweets with around 110 characters get 17% higher engagement, and there’s a reason for that. When you leave room in a tweet, it makes it easier for people to retweet you and add their own commentary.
10 twitter tips

Learn 10 tips for increasing engagement on Twitter.

Jerry Low says:

If you are using all 140 characters in your tweet, your followers will need to edit your tweets before they can add in theirs and retweet. And, that’s not cool. People are lazy. Tweets that need extensive editing work simply get fewer retweets. Ideally, you should limit your tweets to between 80–110 characters.
#2: Tweet During Daytime Hours

The Twittersphere is active during the 11-12 hours of daytime in your audience’s time zone. Between 8am and 7pm, your tweets will have 30% higher interaction. (To find out exactly when your audience is most active, you can use the free tool from Tweriod.)
shutterstock time zone clock image 204951679

Be mindful of where your audience lives. Image: Shutterstock.

That means you must keep your target audience in mind and adjust your timing as needed. If your company’s social media person is in Bangalore catering to a West Coast USA audience, she will need to adjust or schedule her tweets accordingly.
#3: Tweet on Saturday and Sunday

Weekends are not the time to take a break from Twitter. If you want engagement, schedule tweets for Saturday and Sunday. According to the data, engagement is 17% higher on the weekends than it is on weekdays.

Salesforce’s research determined that there is an inverse relationship between brands that tweet on the weekend and the engagement rates on the weekend.
shutterstock days of the week image 187128800

Weekends aren’t the time to take a Twitter break. Image Shutterstock.

But doesn’t this data conflict with the point above, regarding tweeting during working hours? Not exactly. As the data crunchers observed, the daytime tweet engagement is high even during weekends. Salesforce reported,

When brands tweet during “busy hours” (8am–7pm), they receive 30% higher engagement than tweets that fall during “non-busy hours” (8pm–7am). This even includes tweets published on Saturday and Sunday.
#4: Share Images

Twitter’s rich Tweets give you higher levels of engagement for images and videos (e.g., Vine videos). You can get a 150% increase in retweets just by including images.

Buffer conducted an A/B test of tweets with pictures (A) and tweets without pictures (B). In each test, tweets with pictures won by a huge margin.

    The Buffer Guide to A/B Testing: http://t.co/Yo52ZBpmNs pic.twitter.com/lK5ubCNecO

    — Buffer (@buffer) April 11, 2014

Now sold on the idea of using images, Buffer is toying with the ratio of image to non-image tweets. They’ve settled on a ratio of 70/30 (pictures/text).

In-stream images aren’t anything new, but few users are making the most of the feature. It’s a lot easier to pop a few words into a tweet than to use images. However, if it’s engagement you want, you can’t afford to ignore the data.
#5: Ask for Retweets

People are understandably shy about asking for retweets. In fact, less than 1% of brands have asked for a retweet. This is a huge missed opportunity.

When you clearly ask your followers for a retweet, you have a good chance of getting one. Salesforce reports that asking results in 12 times more retweets.

    Follow @LFCUSA today & you could win this signed Brendan Rodgers home shirt! Please Retweet pic.twitter.com/GFKobEVx9y

    — Liverpool FC (@LFC) July 27, 2014

Here’s a tip: Make sure to spell out the word retweet in its entirety, rather than using the abbreviation RT. The retweet rate for “retweet” requests is 23 times higher than the engagement rate for “RT” requests.

I would encourage caution, though. Don’t bombard your audience with constant requests to spread your message.
#6: Use Hashtags

Hashtags double your engagement rate—they are their own implicit call to action. Plus, they create higher visibility on Twitter.

What surprises me is that only 24% of tweets contain hashtags. I would caution you to limit yourself to two hashtags per tweet.

    5 Ways to Improve Social Sharing on Your Blog http://t.co/N7XoC0SVfa by @MelACulbertson #SocialMedia #Sharing

    — SocialMediaExaminer (@smexaminer) July 26, 2014

Tweets that use more than two hashtags have a 17% drop in engagement. You don’t want that to happen.

Stay in tune with trending or industry-specific hashtags to make sure you’re cashing in on a valuable source of engagement.
#7: Include Links

Using metrics from Buddy Media, Salesforce reports that 92% of all Twitter interaction (retweeting, replying, etc.) happens when readers click links. In fact, tweets with links get way more retweets—86% more, according to research!
tweet with a link and a hashtag

Links and hashtags make it easy for others to interact with your tweets.

Since tweets with links have higher engagement metrics, you’d think sophisticated marketers would be using links a lot more. Surprisingly, the percentage of tweets with links is around 36% (compared with 25% in 2010). Clearly we need to tweet links more often.

How often? Twitter whiz Dan Zarrella’s analysis suggests you include links in 60-80% of your tweets as the “sweet spot for retweets.”
#8: Stay Away From Lifestyle Tweets

While celebrities can get away with tweeting about their personal life, brands cannot. Twitter is less of a personal-life journal and more of a professional marketing platform. Be real, but don’t be banal.

Dan Zarrella compiled a list of the top 20 least engaging words on Twitter. These words—such as work, home, watching, tired and tomorrow—are nauseatingly narcissistic.

Your followers aren’t interested in your personal actions. Few people are going to engage with a tweet that declares that you’re bored or are going to bed.
#9: Use Strong Calls to Action

Zarrella also listed the most retweeted words, which have a high innate sense of engagement and most are calls to action. Words like please retweet, help, follow and how to are focused on the reader of the tweet rather than on the sender of the tweet.

Your followers are much more likely to interact if they are the focus on your tweet and you’re clearly asking for an action.
#10: Send One to Four Tweets a Day

There is a mistaken belief that the more you tweet, the more ROI you’ll get from Twitter.
salesforce twitter grapch

Salesforce data shows you can get more engagement by tweeting less.

Actually, tweeting too often can result in very poor engagement. This is particularly true for brands, which need to be careful about coming on too strong with their marketing.

To up your engagement, constrain your tweeting. While you should actively respond to DMs and @s, you don’t need to spew forth multiple tweets all day long.

Conclusion

These 10 powerful Twitter tactics will help you regain momentum on Twitter. By implementing these data-backed actionable tips, you’ll be able to create a compelling presence on Twitter in a very short amount of time.

Download:  http://fileml.com/file/05768w5

Video Marketing Master Free Download

Don't be put off by the inclusion of the word business - it just means that this is a video production and video marketing course designed to help you make money with the skills and expertise that you'll learn. Yes, that might be through effectively marketing your business, but it can also mean this course sets you on a new career path.

Video for Business is not a niche course, instead it covers the day to day requirements of a professional video producer and online marketer. You'll learn about the online video landscape, the details of pre-production, how to shoot and edit professional video, the methods available to get your videos seen, ranked, clicked on and shared and finally, how to measure your results and your successes.

The course is structured in a way to allow complete beginners to start right at the beginning and learn the entire professional pathway, while more experienced students can pick and choose a variety of chapters and lectures to suit their current needs.

I can only reiterate again that this is a full, actionable course. Once complete, you should be able to apply it to your own projects without the need for further guidance. Furthermore, as the video production and marketing profession evolves, so to will this course, with frequent updates and additions to keep you on the right track.

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Expert SEO Baclinking Free Download

I have created a comprehensive new eCourse that will reveal everything you need to know about SEO and Back linking. This course will turn you into an SEO guru who can easily rank all his websites himself for big profits. In this course I will reveal all my newest and best strategies for building quality backlinks that will easily boost your site on Google.

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Google Analytics

Google Analytics is a freemium web analytics service offered by Google that tracks and reports website traffic.[1] Google launched the service in November 2005 after acquiring Urchin.[2] Google Analytics is now the most widely used web analytics service on the Internet.[3] Google Analytics is offered also in two additional versions: a subscription based Google Analytics Premium targeted at enterprise users and Google Analytics for Mobile Apps, an SDK that allows gathering usage data from iOS and Android Apps.

Google acquired Urchin Software Corp. in April 2005.[2] Google's service was developed from Urchin on Demand. The system also brings ideas from Adaptive Path, whose product, Measure Map, was acquired and used in the redesign of Google Analytics in 2006.[4] Google continued to sell the standalone, installable Urchin WebAnalytics Software through a network of value-added resellers until discontinuation on March 28, 2012.[5][6]

The Google-branded version was rolled out in November 2005 to anyone who wished to sign up. However, due to extremely high demand for the service, new sign-ups were suspended only a week later. As capacity was added to the system, Google began using a lottery-type invitation-code model. Prior to August 2006 Google was sending out batches of invitation codes as server availability permitted; since mid-August 2006 the service has been fully available to all users – whether they use Google for advertising or not.[7][citation needed]

The newer version of Google Analytics tracking code is known as the asynchronous tracking code,[8] which Google claims is significantly more sensitive and accurate, and is able to track even very short activities on the website. The previous version delayed page loading and so, for performance reasons, it was generally placed just before the </body> body close HTML tag. The new code can be placed between the <head>...</head> HTML head tags because, once triggered, it runs in parallel with page loading.[9][citation needed]

In April 2011 Google announced the availability of a new version of Google Analytics featuring multiple dashboards, more custom report options, and a new interface design.[10] This version was later updated with some other features such as real-time analytics and goal flow charts.[11][12]

In October 2012 the latest version of Google Analytics was announced, called 'Universal Analytics'.[13] The key differences from the previous versions were: cross-platform tracking, flexible tracking code to collect data from any device, and the introduction of custom dimensions and custom metrics [14]

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