How To Connect Blog To Twitter & Facebook

Sometimes, we need connect our blogs to our twitter account, we can use google feedburner service,
1. goto feedburner http://feedburner.google.com/ and claim your feed for your blog
2. goto twitter http://twitter.com/ and create an account ( since you don’t have one )
3. return to feedburner and select your blog
4. click click publicize > socialize > activate
5. click ‘add a twitter account’ and allow twitter to access your a/c by submitting your username / email and password
6. tweak settings as you wish and ‘save’
7.goto http://apps.facebook.com/twitter/ to update twitter to your facebook
Now , We can use twitter feed.
If you want to update on Facebook, you can do this: [Read more...]

Seo Tips For Your Twitter

Every good blogger knows that there is a world of opportunity in social media, especially the rapidly growing social media platform of Twitter. The site recently went through a redesign in order to make it even more user-friendly, and, as a result, activity within and around it is booming. So how can bloggers take advantage of Twitter? Well, for one, having a solid presence on Twitter is a requirement. But is this enough? Is interacting with your community on Twitter enough to drive traffic to your blog? It’s certainly important, sure, but there’s more you can do. Though you might not realize this at first, it’s actually possible to optimize your Twitter presence for search engines, thus benefiting your main blog. Here are a few things to consider as you reevaluate your Twitter presence.

Do you have the right handle and profile name?

These are perhaps the two most important parts of setting up a Twitter account that is search engine friendly. The handle, a username like @yourbrand, establishes a static url at twitter.com/yourbrand that search engines can index so that future information on your feed can be accessed and linked to quickly and easily. Likewise, your profile name, the name that appears next to your handle in the profile, further establishes your brand. Ideally, both of these names will target keywords related to your interests.

Have you written the right kind of profile?

Secondly, you should take the most important keywords and incorporate them into your profile. Just like any text on the web, your profile can be seen by search engines, so it makes sense to apply the same SEO tactics in this text as you would for any other blog post. Make sure you use all one hundred and sixty characters in your profile, and follow the usual keyword to content ratio.

Do you Tweet for SEO?

Just because you only get one hundred and forty characters for each Tweet doesn’t mean you can’t include some keywords to attract the attention of search engines. Have you ever Googled something and found that one of the first links pointed you to someone’s Tweet? That should tell you that Tweets do get searched, so you should include keywords, especially in the first few words of your Tweet in order to get maximum attention from searchers.

Do you use links?

There has been a lot of discussion about ‘nofollow’ and Twitter, but that shouldn’t discourage you from trying to get traffic and search engine recognition from your links. Because Twitter is so popular now, there are many other third party sites that aggregate Tweets for a particular niche, and these sites can determine their ‘follow’ or ‘nofollow’ policies. Better to count on your link spreading than to give up on linking. Furthermore, the more popular you are on Twitter, the better your link traffic will be. Because of this, you should use a url shortening service that allows you to track stats on your links. I recommend BitLy, which uses search engine friendly 301 Redirects, thus allowing the search engine to index the destination url.

WordPress plugins to help your commenter’s promote their social network

Further to our post on enhancing your WordPress blog through social networking, we have realised that this the flip side to that is, WordPress plugins to help your commenter’s’ spread the word about their social network sites. Any help you give them helps you, as they get a chance to have their say and tell the world about what they do, by directing traffic to their social network profiles, and in the process you get to make your pitch as well. Here are some useful plugins you can use to help that process. [Read more...]

My Experiences about using twitter

I’ve signed up for a Twitter account a long time ago and used it sporadically because it never really did appeal to me. Last week I decided to give it another chance and installed Snitter, a desktop application for Twitter.

I started using it actively and gradually developed an avid interest. I think Twitter is a manageable process that can be adopted for all types of lifestyles, busy or inactive. You’ll just need to integrate it within your normal workflow. It’s addictive but once you understand how to use it, it’ll be a very effective tool indeed.

Having read a great deal of other articles on Twitter, I decided a do a quick summary of all the ways you can use Twitter for both your professional or personal life. Some of these methods go beyond the use of Twitter as a lifestreaming device:

  1. Personal Branding. Twitter is a social media platform you can use to build your personal brand. It has the primary benefit of developing a casual persona and establishes you as a social personality that is connected and approachable. As Twitter adoption increases, new users will be drawn towards well established Twitter personas.
  2. Get Feedback. Need an alternative perspective on how a website looks or the right course of action to take? Blast out a message asking for advice and you’ll receive replies from other users. This collective intelligence can be used as fodder for articles or projects.
  3. Hire People. Need a good logo designer, marketer or programmer? Send out a message asking for recommendations. This is a very quick and easy way to hire freelancers or even companies based on familiar recommendations.
  4. Direct traffic. Twitter can be used to get traffic to your websites or the sites of friends. If you ask your friends to tweet about it, the message will spread faster and further as other active users pick it up. There is a viral nature to all types of news, even on a site like Twitter.
  5. Read News. Twitter users often link to useful sites or articles and can be a source of scoops and alternative news. You can also subscribe to Twitter feeds for specific websites/conferences, which allows you to receive and view content quickly. This is very useful for active social news participants.
  6. Make New Friends. Like any other social network, Twitter has a built-in function for you to befriend and track the messages of other users. This is an easy way for you connect with people outside of your usual circle. Make an effort to add active users you find interesting. A Twitter acquaintance can be developed into a long lasting friendship.
  7. Network for benefits. Twitter can be used as a socializing platform for you to interact with other like-minded people, especially those in the same industry. It can be used to establish consistent and deeper relationships for future benefits such as testimonials or peer recommendations.
  8. Use it as a ToDo list. Use Twitter to record down what you need to do while you are away from the computer. Mark the tweet as a favorite to file it for referencing. Another alternative is to use an Online task management service that is synced with Twitter. One example is Remember The Milk.
  9. Business Management. Twitter can be used as a company intranet that connects employees to one another. Workers can liaise with each other when working on group projects. Particularly useful when certain workers go out often in the field. Updates could be set to private for security reasons.
  10. Notify Your Customers. Set up a Twitter feed for the specific purpose of notifying customers when new products come in. Customers can subscribe via mobile or RSS for instant notification. Twitter can also be used to provide mini-updates for one-on-one clients.
  11. Take Notes. Twitter provides you with an easy way to record important ideas or concepts you want to explore further. Include links relevant to ideas you want to explore. Note taking can also be done offline via mobile applications.
  12. Event Updates. Businesses can use Twitter as a means to inform event participants and latest event happenings/changes. This is a hassle-free way of disseminating information, especially when you don’t have the means to set up a direct mobile link between you and the audience
  13. Find Prospects. Twitter can be used as a means to find potential customers or clients online. Do a search for keywords related to your product on Twitter Search and then follow users. Tweet about topics parallel to your product and close prospects away from public channels by using direct messages or offline communications. Discretion and skill is needed in this area.
  14. Provide Live coverage. Twitter’s message size limit prevents detailed coverage of events but it can allow you to provide real-time commentary which may help to spark further discussion or interest on the event as other Twitter users spread the message. Very useful for citizen journalism.
  15. Time Management and Analysis. Twitter can simply be used to keep a detailed record of what you are doing every daily. This might be boring for others but this type of usage is useful when you want to analyze how you spend and manage your time.
  16. Set Up Meetings. Twitter can help you organize impromptu meetups. For example, you can twitter a message while at a cafe, event or art gallery and arrange to meet fellow users at a specific spot. It’s an informal and casual way of arranging a meeting.
  17. Acquire Votes. Send a link to your stories you’ve submitted in other social news sites like Digg. Sometimes your followers will vote up the stories because they agree with it. This allows you to acquire more support for your efforts on other social media websites.

I suspect I’ll be writing a little more about Twitter in the future including a roundup and summary of some of the articles I found really useful

Obama’s town hall talk in ShangHai

After a string of softball questions from officially selected students, Ambassador Jon Huntsman read out a question that someone had sent in to the US Embassy website, asking bluntly what the president thought of Internet censorship in China.

Taking advantage of this end-run around Chinese government efforts to control all aspects of the supposedly unscripted event, Mr. Obama stressed that he had “always been a strong supporter of open Internet use” and “a big supporter of non-censorship.”

His response – faithfully transcribed onto the website of the official state news agency, Xinhua – was immediately posted prominently on all four major Chinese web portals, drawing delighted reactions from some readers.

“An open country, a great president and an immortal assertion; we still have a long way to go” wrote one netizen signing himself Jiangzhongshan on Sohu.com.

It was never going to be easy in China, where officials prize predictability, to organize the sort of spontaneous discussion on live TV that Obama has made part of his political repertoire.

The White House had envisioned an unmoderated dialogue between the president and some 1,500 students asking whatever they wanted, broadcast on national television here. After a fortnight of tortured negotiations with Beijing, the US settled for a scaled-down version involving about 400 Chinese students and questions from the Internet, broadcast only on local Shanghai TV, a Hong Kong station, and on the Web.

But only determined viewers would have succeeded in following the event. Whitehouse.gov, which live streamed the meeting, was unreliable in Beijing, and though the White House Facebook page also carried it, Facebook is blocked in China, along with other social networking sites such as Twitter and YouTube.

It did not exactly allow the US president to reach out directly and touch the Chinese people’s hearts, but the official Xinhua news agency carried a real-time transcript of the proceedings on its website.

Xinhua also did not flinch from the pointed references to freedom that Obama made in his introductory remarks. “These freedoms of expression and worship, of access to information and political participation, we believe are universal rights,” the president said, referring to four rights curtailed in China.

The questions, though, asked by members of the audience or sent in to a government website, did not pose much of a challenge to Obama – or to Chinese censors. Topics included Obama’s hometown, Chicago, his Nobel Prize, US policy in Afghanistan, and what he hopes to achieve on his current visit to China.

The students attending had clearly been vetted and their questions approved by the Chinese authorities. Two of the four questions from the audience came from student officers of the Communist Youth League, it transpired later.

Still, Obama’s support for freedom of expression – even if it came in response to a planted question – inspired one viewer.

Google experiment to search your friends’ Twitter, Facebook and other postings

Google launched a new product Monday that will allow users to find recently updated public online postings by a person’s network of friends, colleagues or media sources.

The goal of “Social Search,” available Monday afternoon at www.google.com/experimental, is to find relevant postings on Twitter, in blogs or other public Web content published by a user’s circle of online colleagues.

[Read more...]

Twitter Followers VS RSS Subscribers

Twitter Followers vs. RSS Subscribers

You may be aware that Twitter is the newest phenomenon in the blogoshpere. Big name bloggers have been jumping on the Twitter bandwagon for months, and many have effectively leveraged the micro-blogging service to increase readership, while at the same time using it to develop new relationships. The great thing about Twitter is that is helps you develop that two-way relationship that RSS lacks.

Having that Feedburner chicklet increase by a few hundred readers definitely feels good. The more subscribers you have, the more influence you have as a blogger. But I would assert that a new Twitter follower is far more valuable than a new RSS subscriber. Here’s why:

1. Twitter followers see your broadcasts

Although some people will tell you that using Twitter as a broadcasting service is wrong, but I disagree. Many people PREFER their friends let them know of a new blog post via Twitter. I may not always have my feed reader open, but I keep Twitterific in the corner of my monitor all day. When someone announces a new blog post on Twitter, I will very often click and read it.

2. Twitter followers can become your friends

The thing that Twitter offers that an RSS reader can’t is the ability to respond. Sure, there is always the comment section, but you’re far more likely to get a response from a blog author on Twitter than in their comments. Twitter is conversational, and thus Twitter users like to use the tool to converse.

3. Twitter friends can become your fans

Friendship means trust, and people who trust you are far more likely to become fans. Ultimately, fans are what you want.

The way a blogger gets to be influential, and thus make money, is by figuring out a way to get people to use their influence (no matter how small) to promote you. People who like you enough to do this are valuable, and Twitter is the perfect tool to cultivate these fans.

4. Twitter followers are usually testing you

I give my blog readers three options when they visit my blog.

  1. Subscribe to my RSS feed
  2. Subscribe via Email
  3. Follow me on Twitter

The reason I added that third option is because I suspected many people were coming to my blog, enjoying my content, but couldn’t justify adding another blog to their list of daily reads. For these people, I needed to give them an option that let them gradually get to know me. If they enjoyed conversing with me, or reading my tweets, then they are likely to click a “New Blog Post” broadcast when I tweet them, as well.

And since I use Woopra Analytics, I am able to watch the instant results of tweeting a new blog post to these followers. It’s amazing to see the “Live” number shoot up instantaneously.

5. Twitter followers can become RSS subscribers too

During the time since I added the third “Follow me on Twitter” option, I’ve seen my RSS subscriber numbers almost double. I certainly can’t give credit to Twitter for all of them (I worked my tail off in October to increase subscribers), I can say that I do believe Twitter helped tremendously as a part of my overall subscription and traffic increase strategy.

In the cases where Twitter followers and RSS subscribers overlap, consider yourself lucky. You’ve just made a new friend, and a new subscriber.

Twitter confirms major cash boost

Social networking website Twitter has confirmed that it has closed a “significant round of funding”.

There are an estimated 45 million users of Twitter.

Co-founder Evan Williams said in a blog post that the site had secured money from five investment firms.

However, he did not confirm earlier reports that suggested the firm had managed to secure $100 million (£62m), which would value the firm at $1bn.

The site, which allows users to write and share 140-character messages, has more than 45 million users worldwide.

The site had previously raised $35m in February in a deal that valued the business then at $255m.

“It was important to us that we find investment partners who share our vision for building a company of enduring value,” wrote Mr Williams.

“Twitter’s journey has just begun.”

Industry watchers have pointed out that the firm still has no way of making money.

However, earlier this month the site revised its terms and conditions to allow advertising on its service.

“We leave the door open for advertising. We’d like to keep our options open,” wrote co-founder Biz Stone in a blog.

The new funding has come from new investors Insight Venture Partners and T Rowe Price, as well as existing backers Institutional Venture Partners, Spark Capital and Benchmark Capital.