How to know your Twitter leverage
Nowadays, Twitter is becoming one of the top web 2.0 websites in the Internet. People use Twitter to share their thoughts and also web links or ideas. They use it also to review products and ask each others for solutions.
If you finished building a strong Twitter account, you should know your leverage and precisely identify your niche. This should be done carefully because people don’t like generally to be used by someone else for making money.
If your followers notice that you are posting a misleading ad status, they are very likely to unfollow you. First you need to know what your audience is interested in. For example, if your audience is a band of developers, it’ll be useless to post ads about photography or design. Posting ads about cars can be interesting and if (by chance or number of followers), you finish selling a car to one of them you’ll earn a high commission.
However this is very unlikely to happen, developers aren’t interested in cars and they are more interested to get their work done and perform doing their job. Posting ads about software useful to developers will convert well.
To leverage your Twitter audience, you should read your followers status; users will post to their status things they like and retweet things they like a lot. For example if you see that your followers are retweetsing the “J query animation” story and not the “JavaScript animation” one, you’ll conclude that your followers are more interested in exciting and amazing stuff rather that old and traditional one.
You can also use polls and surveys. Ask your audience what they like most. If your audience likes something, you won’t benefit only from their hits, but also from their retweets and the retweets of their followers. I know some bloggers getting retweeted hundred of times and they have very a small number of followers.
Knowing how “rich” your followers are is possibly the strongest indicator of your profile success. If you have rich followers, they can convert into strong buyers and possibly can lead to strong sales and commissions; to know how much wealth they have you need to sneak around without getting their notice.
1- Ask your audience about specific products: for example iphone, imac and their comparison with htc and pc for example if you get enough reviews. If your followers have experienced both of them, then they are gadget-holics and possibly interested in any other gadget to check. If so, you may finish by selling a smartphone to them .
2- If your audience isn’t interested in gadgets or computers, they may be interested on other things like traveling. You can know that also easily by asking them which places they visited and which ones they liked most.
3- If your audience is not wealthy enough then this doesn’t mean you are not going to profit. They can be internet addicts and convert well on free ads. Some sites will pay up to $1.50 for you getting users registered to them.
Briefly, you should understand your audience, which is a very delicate step. You could/should/would know your audience when you are building your audience. Diversification of the type of your followers is not good, try to use a precise niche and as precise as it can.
For example, if you are creating a Twitter account about music, you can specify more “rap music”. All people like music, but not all are interested to buy it and 90% of them will download pirated ones. People who like music a lot, generally like a single kind for example classic or jazz, those people are more influenced and are very likely to buy music, so they can convert into potential buyers.
If you finished building a strong Twitter account, you should know your leverage and precisely identify your niche. This should be done carefully because people don’t like generally to be used by someone else for making money.
If your followers notice that you are posting a misleading ad status, they are very likely to unfollow you. First you need to know what your audience is interested in. For example, if your audience is a band of developers, it’ll be useless to post ads about photography or design. Posting ads about cars can be interesting and if (by chance or number of followers), you finish selling a car to one of them you’ll earn a high commission.
However this is very unlikely to happen, developers aren’t interested in cars and they are more interested to get their work done and perform doing their job. Posting ads about software useful to developers will convert well.
To leverage your Twitter audience, you should read your followers status; users will post to their status things they like and retweet things they like a lot. For example if you see that your followers are retweetsing the “J query animation” story and not the “JavaScript animation” one, you’ll conclude that your followers are more interested in exciting and amazing stuff rather that old and traditional one.
You can also use polls and surveys. Ask your audience what they like most. If your audience likes something, you won’t benefit only from their hits, but also from their retweets and the retweets of their followers. I know some bloggers getting retweeted hundred of times and they have very a small number of followers.
Knowing how “rich” your followers are is possibly the strongest indicator of your profile success. If you have rich followers, they can convert into strong buyers and possibly can lead to strong sales and commissions; to know how much wealth they have you need to sneak around without getting their notice.
1- Ask your audience about specific products: for example iphone, imac and their comparison with htc and pc for example if you get enough reviews. If your followers have experienced both of them, then they are gadget-holics and possibly interested in any other gadget to check. If so, you may finish by selling a smartphone to them .
2- If your audience isn’t interested in gadgets or computers, they may be interested on other things like traveling. You can know that also easily by asking them which places they visited and which ones they liked most.
3- If your audience is not wealthy enough then this doesn’t mean you are not going to profit. They can be internet addicts and convert well on free ads. Some sites will pay up to $1.50 for you getting users registered to them.
Briefly, you should understand your audience, which is a very delicate step. You could/should/would know your audience when you are building your audience. Diversification of the type of your followers is not good, try to use a precise niche and as precise as it can.
For example, if you are creating a Twitter account about music, you can specify more “rap music”. All people like music, but not all are interested to buy it and 90% of them will download pirated ones. People who like music a lot, generally like a single kind for example classic or jazz, those people are more influenced and are very likely to buy music, so they can convert into potential buyers.