Tips to using Twitter for a job search
Like blogging, Twitter is a terrific way to reinforce your personal brand by showing your professional expertise and helping people. To find a job with Twitter, keep this in mind all the time.
1. Discover Twitter. Spend some time surfing Twitter profiles to get a feel for how people are using Twitter. Bookmark a first group of people you’d like to follow. See what you like and don’t like and take notes for reference later. (That’s how I was able to put together this article so quickly)
2. Create a Twitter strategy. Your main goal is to find a job, but what are your secondary goals? Specific people to meet, industry news to follow, etc.? Plan to Twitter accordingly. Sketch out all your goals and ideas on how to reach them but don’t spend too much time on this initially, because there’s a good chance that your ideas will change once you start using the service heavily. And that’s ok, just rewrite your goals and strategy when it happens.
3. Sign up to Twitter. Create an account using your “home work” email address - the one you would use strictly for job searching as well - and choose a username that’s either your full name, first name and profession (think “Joe the Plumber”) or a pseudonym based on a formula of [Adjective][Country][Profession] e.g. SmartTechGuy. If you’re planning to twitter a lot about your private life, consider a second Twitter account.
4. Don’t follow your friends while signing up. After creating your account, Twitter will suggest that you immediately search through your email contacts to find friends that are already on Twitter. SKIP THIS because you’ll do it later. You want to create an impressive profile before telling anyone that you’re on Twitter.
5. Design your profile to impress. For the ‘More Info URL’, put the url of your blog, LinkedIn profile or other brand-reinforcing website. In the Notices tab, make sure you’ve selected ‘Show me: all @ replies’ to maximize the chances for conversation until you’re comfortable with Twitter (you can always change it later). In the Picture tab, choose a clear, professional-looking portrait of yourself that looks good at all the different sizes used in Twitter. In the Design tab, change the background image to something different than the default image. Ideally, upload an image you created with information about yourself and how to contact you.
6. Prepare to simulcast. Free services like HelloTXT.com let you use your tweets for the status messages on your other social network profiles on Facebook or LinkedIn. This is a good way to get more return on your Twitter investment but make sure you’ll be able to reply when people also respond outside of Twitter. Not all tweets will make sense off-Twitter, so only simulcast when your tweet can stand on its own e.g. shared links, tips or answers to Twitter’s famous “What are you doing?”
7. Pick the best tools for your tweets. I like Twhirl from my PC and m.twitter.com from my mobile but using the standard Web interface is fine in a pinch and it’s what most people use. Other tools worth trying are Twitterrific for Mac, TweetDeck which has a nice feature that lets you group Twitter users, Spaz, Snitter, Pwytter, iTweet.Net, fring for mobiles, Twitter Tools if you have a WordPress blog, Twadget on Windows Vista, the Twitter Google Gadget, Twitter for iPhone and many others.
8. Setup Auto-Follow. Use a service like TweetLater so that when people follow you, you automatically follow them back. Prune your followers list from time to time to weed out spam-like followers who aren’t contributing to your conversations or because their tweets just don’t interest you.
9. Choose an url-shortening service to share links. Stay with a service like tr.im or bit.ly that allows you to track how many people click on your link. Even if you’ve tweeted a link before, create a new “shorturl” every time you mention a link so that you can measure the number of clicks separately.
10. Keep handy an updated, online version of your resume. Whether an optimized LinkedIn profile or a resume posted to your blog, you don’t want to hesitate when someone asks you to send it over.
11. Start twittering! Before you have any followers, twitter a handful of messages to set expectations and give people a taste of what they’ll see when they follow you. Then continue doing it, at least 15-30 minutes per day as you slowly grow your network.
12. Be someone worth following. Provide value by twittering tips, sharing news or resource links about your profession and answering as many questions as you can, quickly and well. Enjoy yourself too, while helping your followers as much as you can.
13. Follow people who are likely to follow you back. To gain some momentum in getting followers quickly, Use Twitter’s Find People tool to invite your email friends and contacts to follow you now that your Twitter profile is ready to show off.
14. Browse Twitter directories to find industry professionals to follow . Examples are TwitDir, Twellow and Just Tweet It.
15. Follow people who might have jobs to offer. Use Twitter Search to look for people who have twittered relevant job offers in the past and follow them until you can sense if it will happen again. Notice any keywords in common and then search on those too. Also, watch how people reacted to those offers. Search more keywords to find conversations among other industry pros and follow them too.
16. Avoid certain kinds of Twitter accounts. Some twitterers are simply broadcasting job listings, essentially Twitter-based job boards like TwitHire. Search them but unless they’re focused on your industry, it’s just another time-waster to follow them. Another example- accounts where the number of “following” is multiples of the number of followers, a typical the sign of a spammer.
17. Grow your network some more. Use a tool like Twubble to follow who your followers are following. Visit tweeters’ profiles and see their starred favorites to get to know them. Also, don’t forget the list of people you drew up when you researched Twitter at the beginning of this guide. Do keep in mind the tip above, because you don’t want to give the impression of being a spammer either.
18. Find your best time of day for Twitter conversations. Twitter is best when people discuss and help each other out live but not everyone connects at the same time, often spanning many time zones. Watch the people you follow and choose your Twitter time of day accordingly.
19. Twitter from time to time about your job search. Your Twitter friends need to know that you’re job hunting. An occasional reminder is critical to cut through the river of tweets. Ask if you have a job search question. Post updates on your job search tactics to see what people think. And ask for referrals after you’ve just helped someone with your expertise because that’s precisely the moment they are most impressed by you.
20. Enjoy!
source: http://movvy.com/
1. Discover Twitter. Spend some time surfing Twitter profiles to get a feel for how people are using Twitter. Bookmark a first group of people you’d like to follow. See what you like and don’t like and take notes for reference later. (That’s how I was able to put together this article so quickly)
2. Create a Twitter strategy. Your main goal is to find a job, but what are your secondary goals? Specific people to meet, industry news to follow, etc.? Plan to Twitter accordingly. Sketch out all your goals and ideas on how to reach them but don’t spend too much time on this initially, because there’s a good chance that your ideas will change once you start using the service heavily. And that’s ok, just rewrite your goals and strategy when it happens.
3. Sign up to Twitter. Create an account using your “home work” email address - the one you would use strictly for job searching as well - and choose a username that’s either your full name, first name and profession (think “Joe the Plumber”) or a pseudonym based on a formula of [Adjective][Country][Profession] e.g. SmartTechGuy. If you’re planning to twitter a lot about your private life, consider a second Twitter account.
4. Don’t follow your friends while signing up. After creating your account, Twitter will suggest that you immediately search through your email contacts to find friends that are already on Twitter. SKIP THIS because you’ll do it later. You want to create an impressive profile before telling anyone that you’re on Twitter.
5. Design your profile to impress. For the ‘More Info URL’, put the url of your blog, LinkedIn profile or other brand-reinforcing website. In the Notices tab, make sure you’ve selected ‘Show me: all @ replies’ to maximize the chances for conversation until you’re comfortable with Twitter (you can always change it later). In the Picture tab, choose a clear, professional-looking portrait of yourself that looks good at all the different sizes used in Twitter. In the Design tab, change the background image to something different than the default image. Ideally, upload an image you created with information about yourself and how to contact you.
6. Prepare to simulcast. Free services like HelloTXT.com let you use your tweets for the status messages on your other social network profiles on Facebook or LinkedIn. This is a good way to get more return on your Twitter investment but make sure you’ll be able to reply when people also respond outside of Twitter. Not all tweets will make sense off-Twitter, so only simulcast when your tweet can stand on its own e.g. shared links, tips or answers to Twitter’s famous “What are you doing?”
7. Pick the best tools for your tweets. I like Twhirl from my PC and m.twitter.com from my mobile but using the standard Web interface is fine in a pinch and it’s what most people use. Other tools worth trying are Twitterrific for Mac, TweetDeck which has a nice feature that lets you group Twitter users, Spaz, Snitter, Pwytter, iTweet.Net, fring for mobiles, Twitter Tools if you have a WordPress blog, Twadget on Windows Vista, the Twitter Google Gadget, Twitter for iPhone and many others.
8. Setup Auto-Follow. Use a service like TweetLater so that when people follow you, you automatically follow them back. Prune your followers list from time to time to weed out spam-like followers who aren’t contributing to your conversations or because their tweets just don’t interest you.
9. Choose an url-shortening service to share links. Stay with a service like tr.im or bit.ly that allows you to track how many people click on your link. Even if you’ve tweeted a link before, create a new “shorturl” every time you mention a link so that you can measure the number of clicks separately.
10. Keep handy an updated, online version of your resume. Whether an optimized LinkedIn profile or a resume posted to your blog, you don’t want to hesitate when someone asks you to send it over.
11. Start twittering! Before you have any followers, twitter a handful of messages to set expectations and give people a taste of what they’ll see when they follow you. Then continue doing it, at least 15-30 minutes per day as you slowly grow your network.
12. Be someone worth following. Provide value by twittering tips, sharing news or resource links about your profession and answering as many questions as you can, quickly and well. Enjoy yourself too, while helping your followers as much as you can.
13. Follow people who are likely to follow you back. To gain some momentum in getting followers quickly, Use Twitter’s Find People tool to invite your email friends and contacts to follow you now that your Twitter profile is ready to show off.
14. Browse Twitter directories to find industry professionals to follow . Examples are TwitDir, Twellow and Just Tweet It.
15. Follow people who might have jobs to offer. Use Twitter Search to look for people who have twittered relevant job offers in the past and follow them until you can sense if it will happen again. Notice any keywords in common and then search on those too. Also, watch how people reacted to those offers. Search more keywords to find conversations among other industry pros and follow them too.
16. Avoid certain kinds of Twitter accounts. Some twitterers are simply broadcasting job listings, essentially Twitter-based job boards like TwitHire. Search them but unless they’re focused on your industry, it’s just another time-waster to follow them. Another example- accounts where the number of “following” is multiples of the number of followers, a typical the sign of a spammer.
17. Grow your network some more. Use a tool like Twubble to follow who your followers are following. Visit tweeters’ profiles and see their starred favorites to get to know them. Also, don’t forget the list of people you drew up when you researched Twitter at the beginning of this guide. Do keep in mind the tip above, because you don’t want to give the impression of being a spammer either.
18. Find your best time of day for Twitter conversations. Twitter is best when people discuss and help each other out live but not everyone connects at the same time, often spanning many time zones. Watch the people you follow and choose your Twitter time of day accordingly.
19. Twitter from time to time about your job search. Your Twitter friends need to know that you’re job hunting. An occasional reminder is critical to cut through the river of tweets. Ask if you have a job search question. Post updates on your job search tactics to see what people think. And ask for referrals after you’ve just helped someone with your expertise because that’s precisely the moment they are most impressed by you.
20. Enjoy!
source: http://movvy.com/
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