Can You Get Buy-in for Twitter in the Workplace? (You Bet Your Bippy, You Can)
OK. I started this article with the phrase "You bet your bippy." Anyone who can trace the origins and post a comment at the end of this article should get an all-expense paid trip to tour the Media Bullseye Worldwide HQ (just kidding, guys).
I have been on the Twitterverse for some time and have recently, after nearly six months of wrangling, convinced my day-job employer to use it. I had to do a lot of a) education, b) explaining, c) re-explaining, d) translation and finally, e) make a business case for it. Most of what I do in teaching as well as in business is to explain things that are buzzwords to many people and every day tools for others, so writing this article is a real pleasure.
Here are some tips that can get you off and Tweeting:
Getting buy-in at work
- Know
what you are talking about. Before
you try to sell Twitter, get your own account, follow people, interact,
and know the different type of Twitter users. There are people who do indeed use it
for business communications, there are "I just washed my hair" people,
there are "you all are MORONS" people and recently, there has been an
outbreak of spam. But the bottom
line is that you really have to be fluent in what it is and how to use it.
- Know
how to translate a "micro blogging platform." That's your elevator speech. If you can't explain Twitter in 30
seconds (probably the equivalent of 140 characters), you are dead
in the water and will get the deer-in-the-headlights look at work. You can pick your own reference, but I
usually tell people that it is a cross between a little blog and a message
board - and you can recruit people to follow you an read what you have to
say.
- Know
that the lawyers will get involved.
God bless all of you in communications roles who are not subject to legal approval, but
most of us are. Just point out that
Dell uses it, FEMA uses it in natural disasters, or find examples of
other organizations or thought leaders in your firm that do. That will take you a long way to make
sure that the Legal Eagles get fed and watered.
Starting and Building
Your Brand
- Resist
the impulse to make it all about you.
People who regurgitate fluffy press releases are seen as hacks. If you follow people and have
intelligent comments to make, people will follow you.
- This
is WAY old school, but in addition to the rest of the stuff that people
never read in your signature line in your email (except POSSIBLY) your
phone number, list your Twitter account name. That is something that always gets may
attention and shows some "street creds" in the social media space. I have yet to see a printed business card
with a Twitter address on it, but I am sure they are out there.
- When
you are looking to build an audience, ask questions. People love to give opinions and if you
have a helpful user base, you can develop dialogue with people and get
answers. For example, yesterday I
was looking for a really good example of an interactive press release and
asked my "Tweeps." Got some good
answers back.
- I
mentioned this earlier, but if you use a Twitter account for business, do
not mix personal stuff in. You can't
follow up a "Our CEO is going to give a Webcast in ten minutes: #123456"
with, a few hours later "Getting wasted at the Rhino Bar." Keep the personal and professional
separate.
- Finally, understand, that like radio advertising, like TV advertising, like earned and paid media, it takes a lot of time and effort to build your brand. More importantly, make sure that the people from whom you got buy-in earlier understand this. There are not overnight successes (READ: Cuil). It takes planning, time and patience.
For those of you who are Tweeters, you might notice that I have not mentioned outages or that stupid whale that shows up. I am convinced that with its devoted following and a bunch of cash in the bank, Twitter will find a way to make it more stable a reliable.
So you bet your bippy that you can sell and make Twitter part of your communications enterprise.
Mark
Story works for the federal government during the day, teaches at Georgetown University at night, writes "the
Intersection of
Online and Offline blog," contributes to Media Bullseye, coaches little
league and sleeps infrequently. You can
contact him via email or better yet,
on Twitter - @mstory123. He'll be awake.
