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Twitter for Journalists Gina M. Chen

How to Get Connected. Twitter for Journalists Gina M. Chen. Why Use Twitter?. To mine the web for story ideas To find out what is buzzing on your beat To make connections with readers To make connections with sources. Twitter basics. It’s a microblog (short blog)

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Twitter for Journalists Gina M. Chen

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  1. How to Get Connected Twitter for JournalistsGina M. Chen

  2. Why Use Twitter? • To mine the web for story ideas • To find out what is buzzing on your beat • To make connections with readers • To make connections with sources

  3. Twitter basics • It’s a microblog (short blog) • You can post messages, called tweets, that are 140 characters or fewer • Message can link to your news story, your blog, other people’s stories, blogs Bit.ly

  4. A journalist on Twitter • Keep up with the news • Find needle-in-haystack sources • Get ideas for stories • Get traffic to your blog • Get traffic for your news story • News finds you

  5. Twitter basics II • @Replies • Tweets directed to another person that the whole Twitter stream can see • Uses @username of person you are addressing • Retweet • Repeats another person’s tweet to give wider audience. • It’s an endorsement of person and the tweet. • Uses RT: @username to build reputation currency • Direct Message

  6. How to get started • Create a profile • Some people won’t follow you if you don’t have one • Use real name • Include real city and state • Keyword load your bio • Be professional, but not boring • Use a real picture

  7. Step one: Get connected • Twitter is like a party • It’s boring alone • Get people to follow you • Follow people • Respond to @replies • Retweet people’s tweets

  8. How to get followers • Twitter search • Twittergrader.com • Look for people near you geographically • Look for people who share your interests • Look for people with a lot of followers (reputational currency) • Follow news organizations • Follow journalists who cover same topic as you • Use Twitter lists to find people to follow

  9. What do you say? • Be human • Social media is social • Tweet links to your news stories/blogs • Tweet links to interesting stories/blogs you read • Don’t be me, me, me • If people talk to you, talk back

  10. What about lunch? • Why would anyone care about what you had for lunch? • It’s chitchat • Foster interaction • Builds reputation currency • 80-20 rule: 80% of posts should be news/story related; 20% are human related (Vilfredo, Pareto)

  11. Twitter lists • What is a Twitter list? • “curated Twitter streams of the latest tweets from a specific set of users” (Mashable) • Allows you to bunch together users into groups to get an overview of what they are up to. • Can group them by categories (news organizations) or topics (journalists)

  12. Why to use lists • Create a group of followers in a topic or geographic area • When you get a lot of followers, this makes it easier to check on who is saying what • Makes it easier to interact with specific followers • Make Twitter less overwhelming (How can I read all that?)

  13. Find followers through lists • Using Listorious • What is it? It’s like a phone book of Twitter users, sorted by keywords • Search it to find the type of people you want to follow: • Click on topics of interest to you • Follow people listed under that topic • Follow other people’s lists

  14. The power of lists • Target your messages using @replies, direct messages • Keep track of people on your beat • Keep track of news organization you want to follow

  15. Reputational currency • What is it? Sense of value derived from your online reputation (Anderson) • Web interaction is based on this concept • More connected people have more currency • More people read their blogs, tweets, etc. • You want to connect with people with reputational currency

  16. How this works onTwitter • You endorse people on Twitter, you are sharing your reputational currency • What is an endorsement? • Anytime you perform an act on Twitter that benefits someone else • Retweets, @replies, listing, following lists, tweeting other people’s links

  17. Generalized reciprocity • What is it: Idea that I’ll scratch your back with belief that someone – maybe not you – will scratch my back at some point (Putnam) • So it is good to tweet, @reply, retweet, or list other people • Why: Other people are more likely to do those things to you • The result: Your reputational currency is boosted

  18. Weak ties • Based on Mark Granovetter’s “weak ties” concept • He found that we benefit from “weak ties” with other people • What is a weak tie? What is a strong tie? • How do we benefit from weak ties? • Twitter is a network of mainly weak ties

  19. Relationship • Courtship: Wooing your followers • Pay a lot of attention • Invested/engaged • Bloom off the rose stage • Don’t take him/her for granted • Don’t just stop talking • Satisfying relationship • Regular interaction • Proportional response (Remember weak ties)

  20. Finding time • You have time for what you value • We all have 24 hours in a day • Make a “date” • Aim for 10 minutes every day, spend on Twitter • Consistency matters more than quantity • Remember proportional response

  21. The result • Remember: Twitter is a party • You need to engage to benefit • People who talk have more fun, make more contacts, get benefits of Twitter • The more engaged you are, the more reputational currency you will have • That makes Twitter more useful to you

  22. Online persona • You are developing an online persona • Potential employers, spouse, anyone can find what you said if they want • You can’t take anything back • It is on the web forever • Be professional (but still friendly) • If you wouldn’t want anyone to know it, don’t say it

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