Thursday, March 12, 2009

Twitter 1.0 for Bed and Breakfasts

This is my first week as part of the Tweople in the Twitterverse. I am trying to discover if Twitter, the new explosion in the Social Media World, is worthy of the time. Is it something that can help Innkeepers connect to their guests and build loyal travelers? My initial conclusion is a resounding Tweet YES!

First, let’s define the process. Twitter is a free Social Media website that asks the simple question “what are you doing?” You have 140 characters to describe anything that you want. Sort of a brief haiku of what is going on in your head. A posting is called a “tweet,” and it goes out to all of the people who have signed up to follow your postings (they are called “followers”). You, in turn, receive tweets from all of the persons that you are following (i.e. your friends), hence the social nature of this new media. That is pretty simple in concept. What it is in reality is like a nuclear bomb on the web. Millions of people are all atwitter about themselves. Here is my own experience over the last week or so.

After I set up the account a few months ago, I shot off a couple of tweets about things that were bothering me, like the new LL Bean credit card. I stopped after a bit, because I wasn’t sure whether anyone was listening to my rants. I just did not get what this was all about. Well in fact, there were at least 8 people in the Twitterverse that must have felt the same way about LL Bean, because they signed up to follow the stuff that I was putting out. I didn’t do anything else, but they seemed to hang in there with me.

Last week, after the mighty Wall Street Journal said that Twitter was hot stuff, I decided to explore this further. What I found just staggered me! First, there are an absolutely amazing number of very interesting people who are talking to the world on Twitter. By doing a search of interests or subjects or anything else you can think of, you start to see the profiles (picture, website, and short bio) of vast numbers of people. By clicking a button, you add them to your “following” list, and, low and behold, some of them look at your profile and decide that you might be worthy of following. Basic networking is then happening, and the more you follow, the more that follow you in return. Then comes a daily stream of tweets about anything and everything, but you can look at what comes in and cull the interesting from those that you really don’t want to read. There is an etiquette to Twitter as well, and clearly if you tweet too much during the day without a whole lot of content and interesting stuff, then your followers are going to turn you off (remove you from their following list). Sort of like immediate feedback about your worthiness. The most “interesting people” are tweeting about things that they have found on the web, and include a URL in their tweet. Other software companies have even set up websites to compress the URL’s into tiny links so that they fit into the rest of the 140 characters that you have to tweet with. So, what is happening is that Twitter becomes an amazing information sharing tool that starts from a very simple premise, but unleashes the power of the Internet to get worthy information to you.

Yesterday, I added a tool called Twhirl that sits on my desktop and monitors the tweets that come in from those who I am following. It has all of the functionality of the Twitter website, and even some great tools like compressing URLs and filtering tweets. It signals each tweet as it arrives. There are numerous tools for Twitter, and I haven’t even scratched the surface of the amazing world of add-ons to make the process better. While the search feature in Twitter is good, there are third market search engines that are incredible in their ability to dig out of the Twitterverse those people who might be relevant to you and your business.

Now let’s talk about electronic marketing for Innkeepers. What most of these interesting people are doing on Twitter is promoting themselves or their products or their blogs or their websites. By creating a group of people who follow them, they are engaging their customers and those people who might be interested in their products or services. So they are setting up a network of people to talk with who might be their customers in the future. Now the tough part. Since this is a social media, the pitch may not be as direct as “I would like you to buy my product.” This is about people, and remember the premise is “what are you doing?” Perhaps you are writing a blog article about a great event to take place near your Inn. You could then tweet what you are doing along with a link to that blog posting. Or you could simply tweet about what his going on at the Inn or anything that makes you more human and likable to your guests and potential future guests. The subjects are unlimited. There are a huge contingent of people on Twitter interested in travel. That is because they first are interesting, very savvy, and literate people. These interesting people like to travel. How do I know this? It is simply because you selected them yourself to follow, and, by their selection, your followers are interested in some of the same things you are. It is elementary, but very, very powerful.

So, that’s all for this post. I will continue to update this subject as I get further into the Twitterverse. If you want to follow my tweets, check out InnConsultant on Twitter.

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