I have been using Twitter for almost two months now and I am coming to a number of observations and conclusions that I hope downtown business operators may find of interest and use. Some of these conclusions and observations should be treated as those of a relative newbie to Twitter, someone who is still learning and trying to figure out the best ways of using it for his business and how it might be used by others. They are being presented on the assumption that if you also are a Twitter newbie, you probably will be facing similar challenges and rewards.
However, my views are not like those of the ardent Twitter “fanboys” who account for so much of the writing about it. I am less concerned about detailing how Twitter works –there are lots of sources for that — than evaluating how it can achieve key marketing objectives such as relationship-building, especially maintaining and growing apostles, finding and driving potential new customers, etc. Moreover, my concern is how Twitter might strengthen firms with downtown locations and not how it can free them from their geographic locations.
My basic take-away is that Twitter definitely has very significant potential utility, but overwhelmingly only when it is tied to websites, other social media such as Facebook, and traditional face-a-face activities.
1. Twitter is not just for Twits– it’s a useful way to get and distribute information. Until I really used it, I had ignorantly dismissed Twitter as mainly a communications vehicle for vain, egotistical, self-indulgent TWITS who thought that everyone should know about their most recent activities, be they a meal, a purchase, going to a movie, sex, or a bout of flagrant flatulence. And while it is true that I have had quite a few people trying to connect with me on Twitter (you can block them) who either appear to be in the porn industry or are prone to tweet pious platitudes and dull observations, I also have found that many tweets have led me to a lot of very valuable information and that my own tweets are an exceptionally easy and low cost way to distribute or highlight information that I feel is interesting and of real import and value.
2. The vast majority of my friends, family, and business associates/contacts are not on Twitter. This may be a function of my age and social network — few of the people I know are on either Twitter or Facebook and many of those who are only allow limited access. My tweets are now being followed by 42 people or organizations, of which I knew about 12 prior to joining Twitter. Only two of DANTH’s major recent clients are among them. Furthermore, none of the client prospects we now are trying to cultivate are among them.
On the other hand, many of our Twitter followers are organizations we are very happy to establish relationships with and that can add power to our marketing efforts. Since we also follow them we are often learning from them as well. We look forward to attracting many more of them. But, we do not know who we are reaching within these organizations and whether any tweets are redistributed internally. In addition, I tweeted about a posting to the Downtown Curmudgeon blog, which was retweeted or mentioned in other tweets. As a result we had a very large number of new visitors to the blog and a lot of them looked at other pages on our website. But, most importantly, so far — and it is still very early — that increased website/blog traffic has not translated into new business.
3. How, then, does Twitter now fit into DANTH’s marketing strategy? DANTH, Inc is a relatively small, boutique consulting firm. Our marketing strategy has always been predicated on the effective use of limited resources, which has translated into a focus on repeat business and a very targeted cultivation of potential clients. In that way we are very similar to many downtown merchants. So far, Twitter does not seem to mesh with that strategy except in one marginal way. We find that many client prospects visit our website and use the Internet to confirm the word of mouth reports that originated their interest in us. DANTH’s activity on Twitter may become an additional resource for us in that confirmation process.
DANTH’s presence on Twitter is taking us in a new, more amorphous and more untargeted than we like direction. We are used to targeting specific organizations and executives in them. So far, with a limited list of followers, we are depending on using Twitter’s hashtags –#s — to target our tweets to people interested in certain topics like downtowns, revitalization and economic development. We continue to tweet because:
- Very frankly, it is so easy and low-cost to do
- For many years we have been doing (and continue to do) something similar via email blasts to a targeted mailing list
- Of the increased visitation Twitter has generated to our blog and website.
4. Where we would like to go with Twitter…and where we probably will go with it. Our biggest objective is to figure out if we can use Twitter as a quicker and more efficient tool to communicate with people we are now reaching through our email blasts. But, I strongly suspect that email is much better suited to our marketing strategy and its primary objectives. One of those primary objectives is long-term relationship building, something for which Twitter seems to be ill-suited because, at best, it’s a quick, electronic one-way sharing of information and, at worst, someone talking at you who is full of pieties, platitudes, inanities, garbage and/or outright crap.
But, what Twitter has already done for us is a good indication of how it can help us in the future. Twitter can send new people to our website and blog and if they then decide to contact us, we can try to build a relationship with them. This would be a complicated and indirect causal path for Twitter to impact our new project assignments and one where much attrition can be expected between the tweets and potential clients contacting us. It would be akin to gold mining — you process a lot of earth to extract an ounce of gold. As long as tweeting is not a resource hog it probably will be worthwhile.
We are also using Twitter to feed content regularly and frequently to our LinkedIn and Facebook pages. It already earns a lot of its keep because of this.
The big payoff in relationship building could happen if Twitter could send people to our Facebook page and if that page could be a place for discussions and community-building around downtown issues and problems. For our Facebook page to play that role we need a lot more friends and attracting more friends is difficult because the vast majority of the folks we are now cultivating are not on Facebook and quite a few have overtly proclaimed an aversion to joining.
Twitter does seem to be useful if you are targeting at the level of groups and subject categories — such as small businesses, economic developers, your town or community, downtown revitalization, poverty, etc. — but less so if you are trying to reach lists of specific individuals. With the former, current Twitter users who identify with those groups or categories can find you through searches and your use of hashtags. With the later, the specific people you are targeting must be on Twitter, find you and sign up to “follow” you.
5. Arguing by analogy, for retailers, Twitter is probably not as good a tool as email and other tools for relating to existing store apostles and attracting new customers from local markets. I am a great believer in the value of attracting and maintaining store apostles — very frequent shoppers who like a store so much that they tell their family, friends and neighbors about it. Initially, I had thought that Twitter might be a good tool for quickly communicating with them, but I quickly saw that this was not the case. Store apostles and frequent customers are discreet individuals and retailers who are paying attention to them probably have their email addresses and possibly other contact information. Email provides an existing, fast and effective communications channel to them and one that is not limited by a 140-character limit on messages. The merchant can easily send information to these key customers about new merchandise, sales, store events, etc. Twitter’s advantages are hard to discern, but its costs in terms of limited message length and the need to have customers sign on as followers and possibly even to join Twitter are evident.
Downtown merchants in their cultivation and leveraging of store apostles may also want to provide financial incentives in the form of coupons, which is a function that is sort of possible on Twitter, but in a way that to me seems far from optimal. In this regard, the SaveLocal service from Constant Contact has caught my attention because it is focused on meeting the operational needs of small merchants and helping them to capture more local shoppers. Constant Contact rewards current customers for sending a store’s discount offering on to members of their electronic social networks.
Ben Burgess, of NorthStar Advisers, has been guiding DANTH’s social media reassessment. He counsels that Twitter can drive a lot of new customers or clients to a firm’s website or Facebook page which can be structured to build a customer community for a store or a service provider. If so, it could be another very valuable tool for cultivating and leveraging store apostles. But, Facebook is not the subject of this article and is still something I have a whole lot to learn about. More about it in a later posting.
But, please note that in this process Twitter is not the place where the customer cultivation and relationship building that produces apostles occurs – that is on the Facebook page. Twitter’s function is more akin to an input mechanism that attracts and steers new customers to the electronic apostle-building venues.
Of course, for many downtown merchants, their brick and mortar stores and their “backdoor” off-site activities will provide critically important face-to-face opportunities to maintain and attract store apostles.
6. If you are a small merchant who is selling very unique merchandise or product lines, Twitter may be very helpful. If you are making and/or selling unique ceramics, brooms, aprons, candles, jewelry, enactors clothing, duck decoys, etc., or selling out of production patterns of dinnerware and silverware or are one of a few retail outlets for a furniture or clothing designer, etc., then reaching a large national customer audience is probably of considerable value. Even low penetration of this large potential customer base could yield very significant sales for a small merchant.
Here Twitter may well be very useful, especially if the tweets can drive more visits to a merchant’s website or Facebook page.
It seems likely that in these instances, increased sales will not be from Twitter driving more customers to brick and mortar stores, but to increased online or telephone purchases, with the merchandise being delivered to the customers.
7. For small downtown merchants with a focus on local customers (that’s most of them)…For these small merchants there is a very important and fairly well defined geographic focus. To my knowledge there is no way of accurately knowing how many Twitter accounts are within a store’s trade area or how many of those accounts are active. However, Twitter does have a search function that might help a merchant gauge in a ballpark way the magnitude of the number of Twitter users within a 1, 3, 5, and 10 mile ring-defined trade area who may have tweeted words associated with their merchandise or services. In this regard, Rich Brooks at The Social Media Examiner has written about how Twitter’s advanced search function can help restaurants, a chiropractor, florist or pet shop build their Twitter audience (see http://bit.ly/w6IcPw). Following up, I did an advanced Twitter search for tweets that originated within a 5-mile radius of Morristown, NJ that contained the words flowers or bouquet. Eight tweets between March 11 and March 17 were identified as meeting my search criteria. Several of them appeared to be from merchants offering goods or services. Others appeared “advisory”. Few appeared to be from likely shoppers interested in buying flowers. A similar advanced search focused on Cranford, NJ produced 23 unique tweets, of which a lot contained “suggestive language” and a few indicated possible potential customers. The results probably would be more productive if the search was done just before Mothers Day or Valentine’s Day.
For downtown merchants, shoppers are close enough that most will probably want to do a walk-in store purchase, so an important objective of tweeting is probably to drive more customers to their stores.
It seems to me that it is too intrusive and therefore somewhat foolhardy to ask customers for both their email addresses and to sign up as followers on Twitter. Of the two, email still seems the more powerful, versatile and useful option. However, merchants most likely will get the email addresses from shoppers who are already coming to their stores. Twitter, on the other hand, has the potential of reaching shoppers who have never been to the store or may not even be aware of it without them knowing the stores’ names or handles.
For downtown merchants with geographically limited market areas, tweeting will be akin to a brief broadcast to an audience of unknown size and fairly unknown characteristics, though:
- Trade areas with denser populations will likely have more Twitter accounts
- There seems to be a general supposition that younger, better-educated folks are more likely to be active on Twitter.
Given this scenario, it would seem that the best path for these merchants is to try tweeting if the costs of doing so are not too time-consuming or financially burdensome and the merchant feels at ease doing it. It need not be complex. For example, a Twitter account named Red Bank SleepShoppe in Red Bank, NJ tweeted the following:
- Visit our website to see some of the brands and products we carry! -http://ow.ly/9urtD
- If your current mattress is over 8 years old, it’s time for a new one!
Also, the potential shoppers engaged on Twitter as well as their concerns and interests will likely vary day by day. So a multi-tweet effort by merchants over an ample time period will probably be much more effective than a tweet or two over a day or two.
After a few weeks the merchant can see what the response is and adapt his or her Twitter use accordingly, perhaps even dropping it entirely.
Very important: It also seems likely that merchants will be more effective with Twitter if they have an effective website and/or Facebook page that the tweets can send shoppers to. On the simplest level, tweets do not have room for a lot of contact info. Nor are they a venue for relationship building.
Finally, tweeting is easy to do with few direct financial costs. That helps make giving it a shot worthwhile.