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Index
The Twitter Book
Praise for the first edition from Amazon reviewers (we don’t know these folks!)
About the Authors
Tim O’Reilly (@timoreilly)
Sarah Milstein (@SarahM)
#TwitterBook
The hashtag for this book is #TwitterBook
Introduction
What is Twitter?
What’s Twitter good for?
Ambient intimacy
Sharing media and commentary
Breaking news and shared experiences
Mind reading—and mind opening
Business and civic conversations
1. Get Started
Sign up
Understand what “following” means
Don’t follow people yet
Quickly create a compelling profile
Find the people you know on Twitter
Get suggestions for cool people to follow
Tweet from the road
Test-drive the 140-character limit
Trim messages that are too long
The secret to linking in Twitter
Figure out how many people to follow
Join a conversation: the hashtag (#) demystified
Key Twitter jargon: tweet
Key Twitter jargon: @messages
Key Twitter jargon: retweet
Key Twitter jargon: DM
Key Twitter jargon: trending topics
Key Twitter jargon: tweetup
Twitter jargon: Fail Whale
Try it for three weeks or your money back—guaranteed!
Get help from Twitter
2. Listen In
Use Twitter search
Take advantage of advanced search
Four important things to search for
Save searches
Track search with email alerts
Hunt down—and back up—older tweets
Search the nooks, crannies and archives of your account
Stay on top of several searches at once, including live-event coverage
Track tweeted links to your website
Dig deeper on trending topics
Find out what people are reading
Bookmark links for later reading and draw attention to tweets now
Use a life-changing third-party program
Life-changing program #1: Seesmic
Life-changing program #2: TweetDeck
Use a great mobile client
Follow smart people you don’t know
Figure out who’s influential on Twitter
Keep track of friends and family
3. Hold Great Conversations
Get great followers
Reply to your @messages
Retweet clearly and classily: Part 1—the overview
Retweet clearly and classily: Part 2—retweets vs. quoted tweets
Retweet clearly and classily: Part 3—use the Retweet button
Retweet clearly and classily: Part 4—quote a tweet
What to retweet
Troubleshoot your retweets
Ask questions
Answer questions
Send smart @replies
Get attention gracefully
Tweet often...but not too often
Three cool hashtag tricks
Know your followers
Unfollow graciously
Don’t auto-DM (for crying out loud)
Don’t spam anyone
Don’t let third-party apps spam (or tweet) on your behalf
Fight spam
Recover fast if your account is compromised
4. Share Information and Ideas
Be interesting to other people
Make sure your messages get seen
Link to interesting stuff around the web
Link appealingly to your blog or site
Use the hub-and-spoke model to your advantage
Link to a tweet
Post pictures
Live-tweet an event
Provide customer feedback—griping and glowing
Overhear things
Publish on Twitter
Participate in fundraising campaigns
Make smart suggestions on FollowFriday
Mark tweets as favorites to draw attention to them
Post on the right days and at the right times
Repost important tweets
5. Reveal Yourself
Post personal updates
Go beyond “What’s happening?”
Use the right icon
Fill out your full bio (it takes two seconds)
Spiff up your background
Cross-post to Facebook, LinkedIn, and more
Divulge your location
Post your Twitter handle widely
6. Twitter for Business: Special Considerations and Ideas
Listen first
Have clear goals
Integrate with your other channels
Start slow, then build
Figure out who does the tweeting
Reveal the person behind the curtain
Manage multiple staffers on one account
Coordinate multiple accounts
Be conversational
Retweet your customers
Offer solid customer support
Post mostly NOT about your company
Link creatively to your own sites
Make money with Twitter
Advertise on Twitter...maybe
Report problems...and resolutions
Post personal updates
Use Bit.ly to track click-throughs and create custom short domains and URLs
Engage journalists and PR people
Follow everyone who follows you (almost)
Four services for measuring Twitter
Three bonus tools for business accounts
A. Continuing the conversation—and taking a break from it
Index
About the Authors
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