My Twitter Inspiration Handbook
When I started on Twitter I had no idea what I was doing.
So I made one big Google Doc where I started saving all the best “brand tweets”. Grouped into categories.
Today, it's ready to share. I hope you find it useful.
1/ Quick tips
Teach people something new in a tweet. Short, sweet, and shareable.
2/ Threads
People don't click links. So if you've got a story worth sharing write a thread.
3/ Memes
Make your brand relatable.
Sparknotes sells literature study guides. Twitter and literature study guides don't mix. So Sparknotes use pop-culture to make literature relatable.
4/ “Quick reaction” tweets
Each day a new story consumes Twitter. Think fast and you can go viral.
5/ Build in public
Makes your brand feel ALIVE. People want to come on the journey.
6/ Brand beef
Conflict creates interest. T-Mobile bragging about their 5G is boring. T-Mobile roasting Verizon's 5G is hilarious.
7/ Casual content
Don't complicate it. Most people just want some light entertainment.
8/ Replies
Make a list of a few people in your niche. Turn on notifications. Comment something witty or thoughtful.
9/ Questions
Get to know your customers whilst building a sense of community.
10/ “Reply and we'll...”
Turns causal followers into brand advocates.
11/ Live tweeting
Your audience watch a cult show. That show trends every week. You live-tweet each episode.
12/ Transparency
Twitter loves transparency. Talk openly about your product you'll sell more ofyour product.
13/ Giveaways
Grows your follower count. Builds brand awareness.
14/ Celebrate customers
Making customers look good makes you look good. It's marketing without marketing.
15/ Galvanize followers
This tweet deserves a category of it's own.
65,000 people posting their Spotify playlist. All from one tweet.
16/ Share your product
You're allowed to share your product. Just don't make it look like an ad.
17/ Consistency
And finally, consistency is how you imprint yourself. Your followers should recognise you without looking at the icon.
There's no better example than no name. Consistent tone, aesthetics and message.
That's all folks.
I won't lie this took a while. It'd be amazing if you could share with a pal. Or on Twitter, LinkedIn, Slack, wherever! Really would appreciate it.
If you'd don't want to miss more marketing guides (like this one), please do join my newsletter.
— Harry