#ThrowbackThursday | 9 #TwitterTips for Authors

9 TwitterTips for Authors

Twitter is for twits.

That was my first impression, and my second wasn’t much better: that Twitter is like a gaggle of teenage girls with everyone talking and no one listening.

But I’ve persevered, and Twitter is now my second most influential social media network, after Facebook. And I’ve got to the point where it requires very little effort to add my content and maintain both my profile (@iolagoulton) and the Australasian Christian Writers account (@acwriters).

Despite the noise, the seemingly endless spam from authors who don’t know how to use Twitter, and the rumours it’s dying, Twitter has two huge advantages over Facebook:

  • There are no limits as to the number of followers you can have (Facebook only (!) allows you 5,000 friends).
  • Tweets are indexed by Google, which helps with search engine optimisation. This is doubly important now Google+ is gone.

No, Twitter shouldn’t replace your own website and email list.

But it’s an additional way of getting yourself out there and connecting with potential readers. And once you know a few Twitter tricks, it’s easy to use and doesn’t take long.

So what are my must-do #TwitterTips?

1. Set up a Twitter account

Set up a Twitter account using your author name, not your book name (you are going to write more than one book, aren’t you?). Even if you don’t plan to actively use Twitter, this enables other people to tag you in their posts (using what’s called the at-mention, e.g. @iolagoulton). Note that your Twitter name can be no longer than 15 characters.

If your name is taken, use your website name, or try JohnSmith-Writer, JohnSmith-Author, WriterJohnSmith or similar.

Add your author photo.

And add a header image (use Canva to create a 1500 x 500 pixel Twitter header).

Write your bio.

You have 160 characters, and can include hashtags (see below). You can also include website addresses: use a link shortener such as bit.ly if the website addresses push you over your 160-character limit. Check out the bios of authors in your genre for ideas.

2. Manage Your Follows

The Twitterverse considers it good manners to follow anyone who follows you (unless you’re a major league celebrity). I follow back most people who follow me, excluding:

  • People who don’t Tweet in English (I don’t want Tweets I can’t read).
  • Spam accounts e.g. people who ask me if I want to buy followers, Prince Harry, and all those US Army surgins (I’m pretty sure real surgeons can spell).

Twitter experts used to recommend a range of useful tools to help users manage their followers and unfollowers, but Twitter has recently changed their policies, so following and unfollowing has to happen within Twitter rather than via an app. But that might change …

3. Tweet and Retweet

A tweet is you sending an original message while a retweet is you forwarding someone else’s message. Many people use RT to signal a retweet.

Figure out what you’re going to tweet, and make sure it’s not all about you—no read my blog, buy my book, follow me on every social media platform in existence including MySpace.

Twitter is a social network, and the key word is “social”. Think about what your target reader might be interested in:

  • If you write science fiction, try Dr Who memes and pictures of Benedict Cumberbatch.
  • Mystery authors could tweet Sherlock Holmes quotes and pictures of Benedict Cumberbatch.
  • If you write Christian romance, Bible verses, poetry quotes and funny book memes might be more appropriate. Perhaps no pictures of Benedict Cumberbatch. A shame.
All blog posts are better with a picture of Benedict Cumberbatch. I'm just sorry you can't see it.

Advice used to be to include images and links in your tweets to maximise engagement. That may be true, but my personal experience is that I get the most interaction from snarky “Dear Author” oneliners and #badwritingtips. It’s now recommended that at least 10% of posts should be just posts—not links.

4. Use Hashtags

The # (hashtag) is used to identify topics by making tweets easily searchable by Google, which helps SEO (search engine optimisation). Popular writer hashtags include:

  • Genre tags (#romance, #chrisfic, #christianromance)
  • Book tags (#amreading, #books, #greatreads, #bookblogger)
  • Writing tags (#writerslife, #amwriting, #amediting, #1K1H—writing 1000 words in an hour)
  • Publishing tags (#amazon, #kindle, #publishingtips)
  • Marketing tags (#bookmarketing, #marketingtips).

Research shows Tweets with one or two hashtags get the most retweets.

Hashtags are also used for Twitter chats and events, as the weekly #BookMarketingChat which starts at 1pm on Thursday New Zealand time.

5. Use Appropriate Tools

@iolagoulton tweets book reviews, and tips on writing, editing, publishing, marketing, and social media. I curate and schedule all my social media updates using Buffer. I have sprung for Buffer’s Pro plan (currently USD 15 per month for eight social media ), which means I’m posting regularly without actually being on social media 24/7.

I combine this with a fabulous WordPress plugin called WP to Buffer Pro, which automatically shares all my new posts (and all the new posts here on Australasian Christian Writers) to Facebook, Pinterest, and Twitter.

Many Twitter experts recommend Hootsuite to manage Twitter and other social media accounts (perhaps in conjunction with the WP to Hootsuite Pro plugin). Others rave about Meet Edgar, but that costs around USD 50 per month.

Personally, I find the Buffer interface cleaner and easier to use, and the paid plan allows me to schedule tweets for both @iolagoulton and @acwriters (Narelle Atkins and I both manage the Twitter account, but I “own” it).

Some people also use apps that automate retweeting. I’m not a fan, because I like to know what’s being shared using my name. For example, if you use a plugin or app to automatically retweet posts with the #Christian hashtag, you might find yourself retweeting Fifty Shades of Grey quotes.

Four Twitter Don’ts

6. Don’t follow everybody

Twitter limits each account to following 5,000 people until you have 5,000 followers. Then you can follow no more than 10% more than the number of people following you. So if you have 10,000 followers, you can follow 11,000 people. (Better to be the other way around, and follow fewer people than follow you).

7. Don’t make it all about you

Follow the 80:20 rule, and ensure no more than 20% of your Tweets are about you. Some commentators recommend 20:1. Unfortunately, most authors seem to think it’s all about them, and my Twitter stream is often full of “buy my book!” spam, which I ignore.

8. Don’t send automatic messages

It might feel rude, but don’t thank people for following you, asking them to follow you on Facebook, or subscribe to your blog, or anywhere else. And don’t ask them to buy your book.

9. Don’t automatically screen followers

Specifically, don’t use TrueTwit or any other computer program to determine whether or not your followers are real. The only people I’ve seen recommend TrueTwit are TrueTwit employees.

Yes, you probably do want to screen your followers before following them back. But if you want to make sure your new followers are human, do something human like read their profile or ask. Don’t use an app to make someone else prove they’re human.

For more information …

If you’d like to learn more about using Twitter as an author, here are two suggestions:

  1. Read Twitter for Writers by Rayne Hall (some of the information is now dated, but the principles are sound).
  2. Follow me at www.christianediting.co.nz, as I’ll soon be sharing a series of posts on using Twitter.

Finally, remember this:

Twitter is not about selling books.

That’s a nice-to-have.

The main purpose of social networking is to be social, and to aid discoverability. It’s social. Not sell-me.

Do you use Twitter? Do you have any #twittertips to share?

Author

  • Iola Goulton

    Iola Goulton is the empty-nest mother of two who lives with her husband in the sunny Bay of Plenty, New Zealand, and writes contemporary Christian romance with a Kiwi connection. She works part-time for a local company, wrangling spreadsheets by day and words by night.

Published by Iola Goulton

Iola Goulton is the empty-nest mother of two who lives with her husband in the sunny Bay of Plenty, New Zealand, and writes contemporary Christian romance with a Kiwi connection. She works part-time for a local company, wrangling spreadsheets by day and words by night.

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