Client hacks: Twitter explained [boilerplate]

Has anybody else had a tough time explaining the value and purpose of Twitter to your non-Twittering friends, clients or colleagues?

After writing several lengthy emails, I threw all my best examples and links into a single message. My “Twitter explained” boilerplate is the result.

I encourage you to hack and mash this up with examples of your own. And while you’re at it, please share your favorite Twitter metaphor in a comment below ( for example, “sensibility streaming” or “collaborative unconscious”).

[Boilerplate]

Subject line:

What Twitter can do for your [brand, company, blog, school, course, social life, running goals, academic career, etc]

Message body:

Hey [future Twitterer],

I was thinking it would be great if you had a presence in Twitter [ http://twitter.com ]. In a nutshell, Twitter is sort of like the Facebook status update and IRC chat rolled into a single social application where people write, read and respond in real time. The result is a kind of live collective unconscious of all those you follow.

Twitter posts, AKA “tweets,” are 140 characters in length including links. Think of online news headlines and you get the picture. I think of Twitter as a [your metaphor here] “sensibility subscription” because it allows me to subscribe to other people’s ongoing thoughts and activities and share my own.

Here’s a great animated video by Common Craft that explains it all much better than I can. It’s called “Twitter in plain English:” http://www.commoncraft.com/Twitter

One of the most popular uses of Twitter is as a micro content delivery system. Tools like Twitterfeed allow you to configure an RSS of your latest [blogposts, magazine articles, website content, news, social bookmarks, flickr photos] to your Twitter profile: http://twitterfeed.com

BBC, WIRED, Boing Boing, NYT and many other publications [your examples here] use Twitter as a means of extending their reach and expanding their audience. Here’s the BBC feed: http://twitter.com/bbc

Many educators have done interesting things with Twitter as well. University of Texas media professor Dallas David Parry is a Twitter-teaching pioneer: http://academhack.outsidethetext.com/home/2008/twitter-for-academia/

And Howard Rheingold has the most extensive collection of Twitter links I’ve seen:
http://del.icio.us/hrheingold/twitter

Last but not least, here’s my Twitter …
Twitter.com/[your feed here]

If you were in Twitter, this is where you’d be:
Twitter.com/[friend, brand, client, blog name here]

Let me know if you’d like to Twitter. I’d be happy to help get you started.

[sign off]

3 comments to Client hacks: Twitter explained [boilerplate]

  • Any idea (or sources) on twitter usage? I’m curious as to how many people are using twitter on a frequent basis. All I’ve been able to find are stats on the twitter.com website.

  • I’m also curious – and I’m sure your Googling skills are as good as mine :)

    Let me know if you find anything! Maybe contact them directly?

  • Tom Scheinfeldt and I were talking a bit about this recently. The way I explain Twitter to non-Twittering folks is that its a great blend or median between blogging and instant messenger. It has all the pros of blogging (RSS, publishing system, social) with out all the cons (comment spam, feel the need to post at length). And it has all the pros of instant messenger (more personal and conversational, utility for communication and connections) without all of its cons (need to be online in real time in front of a computer, getting into unwanted conversations).

    Twitter, more than any other social service, has greatly increased my network of real, valuable friends and colleagues.

Leave a Reply

 

 

 

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>