Twitter Has Limits But Dive In Anyway

Twitter Has Limits

The limits of Twitter for brands are as vast as the opportunities. Public companies have to be extremely sensitive to not violating SEC guidelines since every Tweet could sway investor opinion one way or the other. Big brands also face the challenge of finding a voice that is both worth following and true to the brand. Most brands that Twitter offer up banal and self-serving content that is devoid of personality. These kind of adver-tweets simply add to the clutter and do nothing to involve the consumer. They do not create an opportunity for dialogue. They do not entertain, enlighten or engage. Compare that to the VW Twitter tool that prescribes a VW model after analyzing your tweets. This is both entertaining and engaging. Another issue brands need to acknowledge with Twitter is that most Tweets go unread and are lost to the universe. This is simply the price of entry in this ethereal nexus of monologue, dialogue and epilogue.

Another limitation of Twitter is that it might not reach your intended target. If you are an alcohol brand targeting 21-29-year-olds, you may be surprised how slowly this demo has been to adopt Twitter relative to older generations. That said, if you are a mutual fund targeting boomer males between 48-55, you might find your bulls-eye here since this group indexes quite high on Twitter.

Dive in Anyway

All that said, every brand should have some presence on Twitter for any one of the following reasons:
-customer service (Comcast, JetBlue, Starbucks, H&R Block, BestBuy)
-crises management (Domino’s)
-news & promotions feed (Dell, Molson)
-customer engagement (Zappos, Whole Foods)
-to drive web traffic (Samsung, Marvel)
-dissuade impostors (lots of consumers are pretending to be brands Capt’nMorgan, CoorsLight)

Tweet From Your Point of View

To be effective on Twitter, brands like people need to have a distinct point-of-view. This point of view needs to be rooted in a brand truth and enable the brand to speak with clarity for and against certain topics. Once they can define their point of view, finding something worthwhile to tweet about is relatively easy. Keep in mind that the brand does not need to generate all original content, but rather it can add its own particular flavor to existing news items. Sharing this content with brand-appropriate commentary via Twitter can be a genuine service to prospects and customers alike.

Tide Detergent might take the point of view that no matter how much dirt gets thrown, they’ll be there to clean it up and provide links from literal messes (Twitpic links to muddy disasters) to figurative messes (like the situation in Albany). Bud Light could take the point of view that every one accomplishment big or small is worth celebrating and then call attention to minor accomplishments with text/photo links (here’s to you Mr. Dressed Like You’re Ready to Take Center Court Guy).