How Twitter Makes You A Better Writer

By: Jennifer Blanchard

By now you’ve most likely joined Twitter (and if you haven’t, you need to, pronto!). Twitter is not only a great place for businesses and marketers, but it’s also a great place to spruce up your writing skills. Yes. You read that correctly. Twitter can make you a better writer.

Here’s how.

Twitter forces you to be concise -

If you’ve ever used Twitter, you know that you have 140 characters to say whatever you want to say. Now keep in mind, I didn’t say 140 words—or even 140 letters—I said 140 characters.

That’s not a lot of room. Letters, numbers, symbols, punctuation and spaces all count as characters on Twitter.
What all of this means is, you have to be concise. You have to know exactly what you want to say, and say it in as few words as possible.

Many writers, however, are “wordy” and often have long, drawn out descriptions and sentences, so it can be pretty difficult to create a message that’s only 140 characters.

Here’s where Twitter comes in again.

Twitter forces you to exercise your vocabulary -

Since you only have 140 characters to get your message across, you’re forced to dust off your dictionary and thesaurus and find new words to use — Words that are shorter, words that are more descriptive, and words that get the job done in 140 characters or less.

Crafting a message for Twitter requires you to “pump up” your verbs (replacing adverbs and adjectives with them), and discover a better, clearer and more concise way to say what you want to say.

Now most people won’t hit 140 characters right away. No, they’ll end up with 160 or 148 characters to start out with (Twitter tells you how many characters you need to remove to make your message fit).

Twitter forces you to improve your editing skills -

Every writer needs to be able to edit their work. And by using Twitter, you can really hone your editing skills and make them top-notch.

It’s almost like playing a game; trying to write a 140-character message and still get your point across in a way that inspires your followers to take action, to click on your link or to “retweet” your post.

I like to think of it as a brainteaser, forcing me to think hard and dig deep down into my vocabulary to find a way to shorten my message.

I’ve been using Twitter since January, and my writing skills have not only improved, but I’ve been writing better copy as well.

Yet another reason you should be using Twitter. Not that you needed one.

About the Author: Jennifer Blanchard is a creative and effective copywriter. Her blog, Procrastinating Writers, offers writing advice, motivation and inspiration for writers who procrastinate.

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3 Marketing Truths I Wish I’d Known Sooner

By: Tim Berry President, Palo Alto Software 

3 Marketing Truths I Wish I'd Known Sooner

I won’t say I learned all three of these the hard way, because that would imply having put real money into a contest against real people, which never happened. It did, however, take me years to recognize that strategy based too heavily on superior product was not good enough, and I’m still working, I have to admit, on the critical decision of when to change the plan. So I’d like to save you some of the trouble I’ve had, and suggest that the following are three truths you ought to know.

1. Great marketing beats great product.

Sad but true. The full form of this statement is that great marketing for mediocre product will almost always beat mediocre marketing of great product.

I started in high tech in the late 1970s as a market analyst for Creative Strategies. I followed the personal computer and personal computer software markets as a professional analyst into the 1990s and since then as a software entrepreneur. I’ve seen this happen over and over again. The best product doesn’t usually win the race. Sure, it happens sometimes, but far more often, the best marketing wins.

For proof, look at the real winners of this millennium: they’re marketing driven. Amazon.comFacebookZappos? That’s great marketing.

Apple perhaps, with its “insanely great” products? I’d argue that Apple’s design and Steve Jobs’ success story is more marketing than product. There were MP3 players before the iPod, multifunction phones before iPhone, and tablet computers before the iPad.

2. Real people beat real money.

As one of my grandkids would say, “I hope I hope I hope.” The world is changing so fast. Big companies spend big money on big ads in big media, but people prefer local, authentic and real people. Lots of Davids beat the Goliaths.  People want focused, segmented and local, and they want to identify with an individual.

I was one of a group of angel investors who chose to invest in Good Clean Love, a natural organic intimacy product. One of us worried aloud that big pharmaceutical and consumer product brand names might jump on the market, copy the product benefits, and spoil the opportunity.

“Nope,” came the convincing comment from an investor who’s already built a natural organic brand, “that won’t happen because people won’t buy these products from a big impersonal company. People care about the story, and the people behind the story.” And I believe that. I’d argue that Apple’s success feels like Steve Jobs’ success, and Amazon.com is Jeff Bezos’, and Zappos is Tony Hsieh’s. And then there’s Huffington Post. There are so many examples.

And who’s winning in the new world; Facebook, Twitter, and the like? The real winners are smaller companies run by individuals who share their authentic selves.

3. Consistency beats brilliance.

The full form of this one is: better a mediocre marketing plan consistently applied over a few years than a series of brilliant strategies, each lasting months, each contradicting the last one.

That’s another one, like the first one here, that I call sad but true. If you define marketing like John Jantsch does, getting people to know, like and trust you, then you have to realize that it takes being the same you – whether that’s a personalized company you or a larger company brand – over a long period of time. Every time you reinvent the brand, you start back at zero.

Sure, in real-world marketing you can’t keep doing something that isn’t working just because it’s in your plan. But, on the other hand, with any normal marketing strategy you and your whole team are bored stiff with a marketing strategy long before it begins to make impact on those people you want to reach. You need to give it time. And you need to stick with it until it’s not working, not just until you’re bored with it.

You can’t expect to hit the bullseye with every arrow. You keep trying.

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