How To Become An Influencer On Twitter

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How To Become An Influencer On Twitter

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Table of Contents

It was super cool to be named and to see so many of Blogging4Job’s authors named in Moodvise’s list of The 100 Most Influential People in HR and Recruiting on Twitter.

The list is special because Moodvise put some science into it by combining Klout scores, which are too reliant on follower numbers, with Moz’s Social Authority score, the cool bit!

Social what?

Social Authority

In Moz’s own words, “Social Authority is ultimately a measure of influential activity. As such, it highlights content that is successful on Twitter. When you find users with high Social Authority, you’re finding great marketing strategies to analyze and mimic. And we think that this will help you be more successful with Twitter.”

To become an influencer on Twitter you need to:

  • Share fantastic material to attract the ideal audience—people who will be engaged enough to retweet your posts.
  • Retweet other peoples content because as Moz say, “social media is very much a “what have you done for me lately” medium”

5 Steps To Becoming An Influencer On Twitter

1. Why do you want to become an influencer on Twitter?

Get crystal clear on this.

If your answer is ‘spam share jobs with my followers’ you will have to change tack. Twitter is a ‘social’ network not a job board. If you’re not prepared to invest the time, advertise your jobs on Indeed.

If your answer is to build a following of people interested in your [company / industry / people / hobby] then that’s a better starting place.

2. Think like a marketer

Who are the people you would like to have following?

Again, be specific.

For example, my specialty is social recruiting so I want a following of HR, In-house, or Agency Recruiters and maybe, those who fall in the HR Tech or HR Marketing arena too.

What does your audience want to hear?

In my case, they want advice, answers, simplification, knowledge, understanding of matters that impact on their hiring daily.

What hashtags will they look for?

Search on Twitter or Hashtagify.me for popular and related hashtags. The addition of # in front of a word makes it a clickable link and therefore a popular way to locate new people and content.

Influencer on Twitter

Make it easy for people to follow you

So often I see bios that are unnecessarily cryptic so I don’t follow. Don’t make this mistake.

Use a great profile picture of yourself not a logo and use all of your 160 character bio to tell people what you’re about. It doesn’t need to be boring, just easy to understand, in seconds.

And before you start following people, start sharing content!

You are unlikely to have enough of your own, so look for other people’s original content in places like Feedly, Swayy and even Klout. Always remembering what your target follower wants to see!

3. Follower numbers don’t matter, the right followers do

I am testament to this.

If Moodvise had based their list on Klout score alone, I may not have made the cut. Even though my Klout score is fairly good (not that it’s ever worth getting obsessed about it!) it is reliant on follower numbers.

So even though I’ve only got 3,500 followers because I have a strong following in the HR & Recruitment community who are engaged with the content that I am sharing and because I’m sharing their content, my social authority put me right up there.

Make sense?

4. Personally Engage

Automation is acceptable, but you must physically participate. Therefore, even though I advocate scheduling posts using fantastic tools like Buffer, nothing matches the human touch.

To become an influencer on Twitter, you’ll want to engage with other influencers… correctly.

One of the best tools for finding influencers is Followerwonk (though I like Topsy too). Enter your search and then change the column ranking to ‘Social Authority’ and you’ll know who to engage with.

Influence on Twitter

Here I’ve searched Twitter bios for #socialrecruiting and see Bobby is in prime position. We’re already regularly engaging but if I wasn’t…

The right way to engage is to:

  • Follow Bobby and add him to a list (my favourite way to stay organised).
  • Use a tool like Tweetdeck (though I prefer the Mac app Tweetbot) to keep track of tweets from people in your lists.
  • RT or comment on something shared.
  • Favourite tweets that tickle you but perhaps don’t warrant a RT.
  • Read his blog and share to Twitter.

The wrong way to engage:

  • @mention broadcast. It is ok to reply to a tweet with a relevant and thoughtful comment or to use someone’s @username when sharing their blog post for example. But it’s not ok to go @rjmyeOLIOdotcom follow me, read this, want this job…. etc.
  • Over favourite. Other than the point above, nothing looks worse than favouriting 10 tweets in a row… it’s like endorsing people on LinkedIn for 15 skills when you’ve never even met them.
  • Be rude, insulting, swear etc. You are allowed to disagree but do it respectfully. Ultimately it reflects on you, they’re already influential.

5. Thank, thank, thank!

Remember that someone has actually taken the time to RT your post or mention you in a comment so thank them!

It’s noisy out there on social media, the kindness they’ve shown is worth your gratitude.

 

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One Comment

  1. Amazing post and really actionable tips, Katrina, thanks for this.
    I am a recent entrepreneur and just started a new Twitter A/c with my business name and I am using my company logo. I have read couple of articles on Twitter and social media but I am a bit confused after reading this. I have my personal A/c where I have my own profile pic but in case of my company A/c, shouldn’t I use my company logo? If not then why?
    Other than this all the points are so much clear and thanks for the external resources, you shared from here.

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