Category Archives: Entrepreneur

Green Business Opportunities

I thought you might be interested in a new umbrella of business sites I’m starting.

Green business.

I mention this because the new business landscape seems to present unusually favorable opportunities in several sectors. One such sector is in green businesses.  Environmentally friendly businesses.  And it certainly doesn’t hurt to get in early, before the field gets too crowded.

Two posts where I’ve discussed these opportunities, with the help of green future experts and gurus like Tom Friedman,  are Bootstrapping A Green Business and Clean Energy Will Be Big – Just Look Who’s There

New Energy Research is the first of these sites.  It deals with conversions you can make very simply to conserve energy for yourself.  But it has a dual purpose, in that any of these methods suggest a business you may consider starting to help others take advantage of these new conservation techniques.

If you get a chance, take a look and let me know if you have something to add.

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Investment In Women in Emerging Markets Promises Long Term ROI

For some time now, women have formed non-profits, and along with governments and non-governmental agencies, have sought to provide micro-loans to other women in emerging nations, in order for them to start their own businesses.  Usually the loans were to automate a skill the women already possessed, such as enabling them to purchase an industrial sewing machine.  Or to capitalize on an asset they already possessed, such as enabling women of a Latin American mountain village, which raised geese, to start exporting pate to France and goose down pillows to the United States.  But the array of business skills they needed….in marketing, book keeping, product management…. was sorely lacking.

World Women Trade Fair

World Women Trade Fair

Ms. Okoli-Owube, 31, faced this dilemma first hand.  Even with a university degree, she found herself struggling to start a business and learn business skills at the same time. When she “saw a local newspaper advertisement last spring for 10,000 Women, a global entrepreneurship program run by Goldman Sachs, she and about 100 other women jumped at the chance to apply.”

As reported by the New York Times in Business Skills for Women in Emerging Markets, the welfare of girls and women has long been on the agenda of international agencies. The World Bank, for example, announced steps earlier this year to increase support for women entrepreneurs by channeling some $100 million in commercial credit lines to them by 2012.

But corporations have also begun to take their economic power more seriously, especially in emerging markets.

Many corporate programs employ microloans, grants or gifts to promote business education. Goldman decided to take a different approach after its research showed that per-capita income in Brazil, China, India, Russia and other emerging markets could rise by as much as 14 percent if women had better management and entrepreneurial skills.

“It’s not only philanthropy they’re after,” said Geeta Rao Gupta, president of the International Center for Research on Women. Goldman “had the idea that investment in women means a return on the gross national product of the country, and on household income.”

The company set aside $100 million over five years to bring business education to 10,000 qualified women business owners in developing countries, a commitment that remains unchanged despite banking industry turmoil.

Ms. Rao Gupta said the long-term view that Goldman and others were taking in emerging markets might help form a new economic stratum in societies where women’s participation in business traditionally had been restricted. Laws and customs in some countries, for example, bar women from opening bank accounts or require a husband’s permission to set up a company.

“This is the next step for women because it’s investing long term in business skills,” said Ms. Rao Gupta, whose institute researches and provides technical assistance for women in developing countries.

It has been said: “If you want to help a country, help the women in it.”  We applaud this commitment to women in developing countries.  We hope it continues and expands.  There is no question, in my mind, it will be a success in enpowering these women and consequently helping their families and their entire communities.

Photo Credit: World Women Trade Fair – The Goal of the International Handcrafted Gift and Home Textile Expo . is to assist women entrepreneurs living in third-world countries to ACCESS  GLOBAL MARKETS , and to also create awareness of the potential of TRADE as a mechanism for development and poverty reduction in developing countries. They use fair trade practices and eco-friendly products that do not destroy the environment. They are helping to reduce the level of poverty through community projects-building schools, health clinics, and providing training programs to other artisans leading to job creation.

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New Year’s Resolution: Collaborate

You can’t do it all.  Neither can I.  Or anyone else, for that matter.

If you’re like me, you can become so enmeshed in “doing” things, you don’t “delegate” or “outsource” enough or find someone to share the load and partner or collaborate with.  These are the keys to being able to have the time to market yourself and focus on those things you do best or that only you can do.

One thing I’ve noted about a genuine collaboration is that the other person, ideally, is as invested in the business at hand as you are. I’ve also noticed when you “outsource” something, there’s no question you can find someone with the technical skills to accomplish your task.  I do it all the time.  But what’s often missing is the “loyalty factor”. Those times when your client suddenly has a crisis he shoves on to you or needs you to accomplish at warp speed.  Do you think your assistant or tech person from Russia or Eastern Europe or India or even Kentucky is going to bust his ….lets euphemistically say “off time” ……to get this done for you?  Hmmm. Maybe not.  Or maybe there are just more holidays, family gatherings, illnesses in other regions than where you are.  If you have had the same employee for 20 years, maybe.  But someone who’s collaborating with you and has as much of a stake in the outcome and satisfying the client as you do……. they will step up to the plate. And, aside from sharing the load in ordinary times, that’s reason enough to look for people to collaborate with.

Brian Clark of Copyblogger says: “The thing is, even if I couldn’t write my way out of a McDonald’s bag sopping with Big Mac grease, I could still make money. My knowledge of partnering strategies (joint ventures, strategic alliances, project collaboration) guarantees the ability to put together a deal that has all the necessary talent and assets to make a project happen.

And even if I were dead broke, I could do it without spending a dime, all while making everyone involved better off. Including me, of course.

Now, I’m not saying this because I’m some special hot shot. Even though I practiced business law and saw first hand that the real rich in the room were the business people who made the deals (not the lawyers who wrote them up), it still took me 5 years to apply partnering strategies in an entrepreneurial way.”

That, fortunately or unfortunately is an excellent point.  It is the person who makes the deals who makes the money. One may have to write, or travel or research or do something else to raise your profile and get the attention of the people to make the deals with ( see post on Tweet Your Own Horn on how to meet the right people.)  But in the end, it’s the deal that matters.

Find someone in your arena who can help leverage what you do.  If you have an online blog or business, find someone, or several people who can help you write.  Or provide you with a successful product to promote and split the revenues.  There’s power in numbers.  There’s power in collaboration.  Go out and make it happen!  And good luck!

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Tweet Your Own Horn

If you’ve followed this blog at all, you know I’m a firm believer that self promotion is part of the game of Twitterbusiness. The difference between business success and business failure often has more to do with effective self-promotion than with technical competence. If you want recognition, you must start promoting yourself.

So how do you promote yourself in a professional and sophisticated way?

One way is to deliver something of value.  ( Your ideas and professional expertise, of course.)  And one of the very best ways to do this today is using Twitter to tweet your own horn.

As Ron Miller points out: Your Business Needs to Pay Attention to Twitter

Over the past year or so, Twitter has become a full-blown communications phenomenon. For those of you who don’t follow every social networking trend. Twitter is a micro-blogging site where you enter your thoughts, whatever they may be, in 140 or characters or less. Experts say if you aren’t paying attention to Twitter, your business may be missing out on more than you think…

I’m a recent convert to using Twitter and am just trying now to set up a system myself to use it in a strategic way.

So let me turn to an expert, Michael Stelzner, and give you what I think is a stunning and very compelling  example which Michael used in How to Use Twitter to Grow Your Business on practical ways to use Twitter. Trust when we say your tweets can capture the attention and interest of top level people in your field, so best to learn how to do it:

“The Twitter Plan

Cindy King, an international sales specialist, saw a huge boost in business inquires by implementing a strategic Twitter plan.

“Following the right people on Twitter was key. There are some people very gifted at building relationships on Twitter. As I followed these online community builders, I realized that some of them are also excellent direct response copywriters. They get their Twitter followers to take action,” said King.

“Light bulbs went off, and I spent a weekend putting together a tweet marketing plan and entered in 6 weeks worth of tweets, 5 a day, using TweetLater. I used a mindmap, created categories, varied times on tweets and used BUDurls so I could track results and improve my tweet plan the next time around. That was a month ago,” explained King.

When King finds a spare minute between projects, she logs into Twitter and watches what folks are talking about. When she Tweets, about 90 percent of the time she presents useful information and resources to her followers. The remaining tweets are surveys and questions. Following this strategy, King saw an 800 percent increase in inquiries about her business after she setup her Twitter campaign.”

And another example:

“Getting In Front of High Profile People

B2B copywriter Terri Rylander took a much different approach. At first she was very skeptical of Twitter. “I looked at it but couldn’t figure out why people would continually send out messages about the size of a text message, unless they were a teenager. Twitter was for sending updates they said. I don’t have time for updates, and besides, who would care?” said Rylander.

She later came across a peer in her industry that was using Twitter and suggested Rylander follow her on Twitter. “That’s when I discovered Twitter as a business tool. I’ve been in my particular niche for over 10 years and know who the players are (though they don’t know me). When I checked who she was following on Twitter, there they all were! It read like a “Who’s Who” list.”

Rylander joined Twitter and began following and interacting with the people she respected. “Other than a cold call on the phone or e-mail, I would never have the chance to get my name in front of vendors, industry analysts, and industry experts. I’ve had a number of Twitter conversations that have also led to personal conversations.”

To stay top of mind with experts, she offers interesting links, responds to tweets, and posts her thoughts for conversation at least a few times a day.”

Michael Stelzner also offers a number of very useful tools for your Twitter Toolkit, and I suggest you go to How to Use Twitter to Grow Your Business to collect them all.  That’s what I’m going to do.

You can follow Michael here on Twitter .  When I get my Twitter plan up to speed, I’m going to ask you to follow me on Twitter also, and I’ll follow you.  Some of the Top Tweeters have 10,000 people following them.  But they all started with just a few.

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How to Get Really Rich!

BEVERLY HILLS, CA - JANUARY 15:  Real Estate t...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

I hate just about all the articles and most of the books about “How To Get Rich in 6 Ridiculously Easy Steps” and everything remotely related to that genre.  Usually, on the Net at least, there’s a photo of a  24 year old in front of a glamorous swimming pool or standing on a beach in Hawaii, Diamond Head peaking up in the distance.  Of course, there’s no telling if the young man is simply occupying a room in the hotel with the swimming pool and the beach. ( Or even a waiter or busboy there.)

And a lot of you may have seen John Chow.com, self proclaimed “dot com” mogul, whose limitless ads about “making money online” look pretty cheesy to me.  But that’s just me.  His video on his website, The Dot Com Lifestyle, shows Chow, an ordinary looking guy in average clothes, walking his baby in an ordinary stroller to an ordinary park against a very average landscape.  Pretty unimpressive stuff. Certainly not the stuff of which dreams of vast wealth are made.  But who knows?  He just doesn’t seem like the kind of guy to downplay whatever he may have since he runs an ad proclaiming “Learn How I Went From Zero to $40,000 A Month By Blogging and How You Can Too!  Hmmm…….

At least when Donald Trump tells you he’s rich you may argue about the details….. a couple of hundred million?…..a billion? …..a couple of bankruptcies?…..no, those are just his casinos, “less than 1% of his net worth“……. at least he’s got the flash and gaudy, gold plated grandeur to back it up.  He has real buildings and real hotels and beauty contests and employees to authenticate he’s worth a lot of something.

So, imagine my surprise when I came across this post by someone who actually seemed to have some life experience revealing how many people actually do get rich.

From what I know, author Paul Sloane really has it nailed. He doesn’t mention inheriting money, or marrying for money but I’m not going to quibble because I think he’s talking about how to go about making money if you have to work for it. ( Marrying for money could be considered work but we’ll save that for another post.)

Sloan starts off The Six Best Ways to Get Rich” by saying:” We tend to assume that if we work hard and save money then one day we will end up wealthy. This is wishful thinking. We are more likely to end up with some modest but useful savings. If you want to accumulate serious wealth then there a number of approaches you can use and some are much more effective than others. The best ways are as follows:”

I’m not going to detail all 6 ways.   I’m going to give you the two I think most likely for the majority of people.  But you can always go to Sloane’s post if you want to read the rest:

  1. “Start your own business and eventually sell it.This is the most effective and proven way to become rich. If you can find a new approach to a customer need and build a profitable business that addresses that need then you have created real value. It could be a cleaning business, a hairdresser’s, a consultancy or an investment bank. It will probably take years of very hard work to build up the enterprise. Most new businesses fail so the risks are high. You need all the skills, dynamism, perseverance and diligence of an entrepreneur. But if you can pull it off the potential rewards are huge. This is how many of the seriously wealthy people did it.” Of course most people don’t have the risk tolerance to start their own business and many lack the tenacity to stick with it, so this will be the minority.  But many believe it to be a happy minority because they are doing what they want and at the very least, have their independence.
  2. Join a start-up and get stock. Odds are low.  But if you think you might be lucky, go read Sloan’s post.
  3. Exploit your skill as a self-employed expert. Takes a lot of discipline to develop expertise. So, statistically, odds are low
  4. Develop property. Here’s a real winner.  Many people do it with their homes, just by buying in the right neighborhood and continuing to scale up at every opportunity.  Sloan says:”Buying, developing and selling property is a well-established way to build a significant capital position. One of the key elements is that by borrowing money you can gain leverage on your investment. Say you borrow $200,000 and put in $50,000 of your own to buy a property for $250,000. Then you develop the property and sell it for $400,000. The property has increased in value by 60% but your $50,000 has now grown fourfold to $200,000. You have to select the right properties in the right areas and develop them wisely. You are at risk from booms and busts in the property market. However, in the long term this remains a proven way to accumulate wealth.”  I can authenticate for you that this works.  It’s not as fast as winning a lottery but it’s a sure thing.  And you don’t lose all the friends who want to borrow money from you, if you win the lottery.
  5. Build a portfolio of stocks and shares. Many don’t have the discipline to accumulate a portfolio of stocks and hold on to it through wars and recessions.
Oh.  Now that I look at this post again I see that Sloan actually did mention the two I thought he’d forgotten  Number 6 is:
  • Inherit wealth. It helps if you were born to successful or wealthy parents but failing that, you could marry fortuitously!
But the first you have no control over and the second is not as easy as one might think.  So you may want to aim for starting your own business and buying a house you can afford in a great neighborhood, then putting a lot of energy into improving it over the years.
Do you have some other ways to get rich?  Or do you have some examples we can learn from? Send them in..
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Broadcast Your Personal Brand Using Tweet

Image representing TweetDeck as depicted in Cr...
Image via CrunchBase

Broadcasting your brand can be a two way street. The goal is to start up communication with as wide a swath of people as you can manage.  What we are learning on the Net is there is no better way to start that conversation than with short Tweets, small messages throughout the day that let people get to know you and start listening to what you have to say.

And one of the best apps you can use as a “control panel” to guide you through the day of Tweets or broadcasts is the newly enhanced TweetDeck, http://search.twitter.com/search?q=TweetDeck

According to early adopter and tech guru, Lous Grey, “TweetDeck has already become the go-to Twitter application for many of Twitter’s most-active users, including Ross Mayfield, Marshall Kirkpatrick, Darren Rowse, Mark Krynsky and Guy Kawasaki….” these are all well known people on the Net you should check on and see how they use Tweet to build their popularity.


The New TweetDeck: Click for Full Size

According to louisgray.com: TweetDeck Readies New Release, Slimming Down & Adding Services “a long list of new features includes:

  • Adding sent direct messages to the direct message (DM) column.
  • An added spell checker
  • The addition of a “narrow columns” option
  • Integration of TweetShrink
  • The introduction of new TweetDeck Services


TweetDeck Will Display Narrower Columns to preserve space.
One of the few concerns I’ve seen voiced regarding TweetDeck is that it can be a screen real estate hog. Once you start with a column showing your friends’ tweets, add a Replies column and Direct Messages, pretty soon you’re giving up a good chunk of your monitor. With that in mind, Dodsworth has both updated the interface to make it slimmer, but also added the aforementioned “narrow columns” option. The addition of sent DMs in the DM column also makes sense, essentially showing the conversation in full, assuming you are both sending and receiving DMs with the same Twitter users.

The New TweetDeck Integrates Spell Check
The addition of TweetShrink to TweetDeck also helps to bail you out in the event you have something to say, but just can’t seem to keep it down to a mere 140 characters.

For example, the note: “Will it reduce the number of characters in my message or tell me what to cut?” is shortened to “Will it reduce the number of characters in my msg or tell me what 2 cut?”, saving me five characters. Who knows when that could come in handy? It also reduces common words like “and” to &, for example.

Also interesting is the addition of the first of what is expected to be many TweetDeck Services, that enables additional information from outside of TweetDeck to be displayed. In this version, there is an undocumented feature that injects your follower data in the top of the replies column as the application is started, powered by twittercounter.com. Dodsworth promises more will be integrated along the way.”

If you haven’t gotten on the Tweet bandwagon before now, today is a good time to start.  It’s like having your own broadcasting station to get your personal brand out there and growing followers.

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15 Top Business Blogs

Of course, you know there are many more great business blogs out there.  For the moment, these are some that strike me as particularly useful.  If you’d like to add to the list, just post your comment and I’ll put it up.

So, here goes:

Career News & Job Search

All Top Career News:  a cornucopia of career news, articles, tips by hundreds of bloggers.

Job Mob: has some insightful articles and good tips.

Entrepreneurship

How To Change The World: Guy Kawasaki, is a pretty down to earth guy, but he is actually world famous as a tech entrepreneur, evangelist, author, speaker and blogger. He gets it, big time, and he shares his insights generously.

Toilet Paper Entrepreneur: If you can get beyond the initial toilet paper analogy, which is humorous, if a little indelicate, Mike Michalowicz offers good advice and tips for new entrepreneurs.

About Entrepreneurs: Scott Allen’s practical guide for entrepreneurs.

Planning Startups Stories, the very seasoned and successful Tim Berry’s blog, sharing his insights on starting your business.

Bootstrap Me: about bootstrapping, small business, entrepreneurs, start up.

Escape From Cubicle Nation: a favorite and one which will start you thinking about how to move on.

Marketing

Duct Tape Marketing: John Jantsch has to be at or close to the top when it comes to marketing.

Seth Godin’s Blog: marketing guru has insightful things to say about all things marketing

Winning the Web: internet marketing strategy and other very insightful tips on running a blog.

Social Networking

How To Change The World: Guy Kawasaki, from time to time, has more social networking how to information in one blog than others do all year.  Yes, I know I mentioned Kawasaki under entrepreneurs, which he definitely is, but he is an uber successful guy, who wears many hats, so I thought I’d mention him again in this context.

ChrisBrogan: one of the most popular social networking bloggers, sharing many moments of his life with you and informed tips on how to raise your social networking IQ.

Tech
TechCrunch: Tech news for those in the know.

Silicon Alley Insider if you like to keep up with gossip and goings on in Silicon  Valley

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Twitter Tools

Image representing twitterfeed as depicted in ...
Image via CrunchBase

Currently we are in the process of learning how to use Twitter so we can make new friends, broaden out sphere of influence and blow our own horn, in order to be more successful.

Since I am no authority on Twitter, I’m going to turn to stand in tech evangelist, entrepreneur and Twitter guru Guy Kawasakit to tell you which tools to use and how to use them.

In Looking for Mr. Goodtweet: How to Pick Up Followers on Twitter, Kawasaki provides……

“Tip 8: Use the right tools. At the end of the day, you either have many followers or you don’t. A good effort doesn’t count, so you might as well use the right tools to make picking up followers as easy as possible. Here’s what I use:Here’s what I use:

  1. SocialToo. SocialToo provides a service that automatically follows everyone that you do. It also enables you to send them a nice welcome message. If you heed my advice to follow everyone who follows you, it’s indispensable. It can also inform you when someone has stopped following you too.
  2. Twitthat. This is a Firefox button that you install by dragging onto your toolbar. You click on the button, and it grabs the link of the page you’re reading and creates a tweet with from the link. By default, it quotes the existing headline, but you already know you should blow that out.You can also create custom “actions”—meaning a snippet of text to precede your tweets. I made my custom action the simplest possible: “-”. I wish that a custom action wasn’t required, that the editing area was larger, and that Twitthat displayed a character count, but how can I complain about something that’s free and indispensable?

    Update: check out a product called Adjix. It works like Twitthat plus it doesn’t require a custom action, the editing area is large, and it displays the character count. It also shows how many people clicked on each link.


  3. TweetDeck. TweetDeck is an Adobe Air application that front ends Twitter. You can open multiple panes on it with specialized purposes like displaying your direct messages and custom searches. These custom searches enable you to create a “dashboard” to Twitter.
    Picture 5.jpg

    TweetDeck is what I use for custom searches. I have a pane with this custom search (brackets not included): [Guykawasaki OR Alltop OR “Guy Kawasaki” -Alltop.com]. This finds all instances where people mention “Guykawasaki” as well as my own tweets because they are from “@guykawasaki” and “Alltop” plus it removes all tweets with “Alltop.com” (Notice that there’s a minus sign before “Alltop.com” and you must capitalize the “OR”.). I remove tweets containing “Alltop.com” because hundreds of people evangelize Alltop news posts by using this Twitterfeed (see below).

    You can also do custom searches like this at the Twitter site by clicking here, but the TweetDeck interface is much prettier.

  4. Twellow. Twellow is a site that categorizes people according to their interests by monitoring their public messages. Its categories include accounting, advertising, marketing, real estate, and science. You can use it to find people who are interested in the same topics you are. Here is an example of the people in the beer category (Courtesy of @ducttape).
  5. Twittelator Pro. This can provide the same custom search results as TweetDeck, so I use it whenever I’m not on my MacBook.
  6. photo.jpg
  7. Posterous. Don’t click on the link. Instead, send an email to post@posterous.com with a photo, video, or audio clip attached. Posterous will create a blog for you and post the photo, video, or audio. You can even include the HTML embed snippet from video sites like YouTube, and Posterous will embed the player. Your subject line becomes the headline of the posting, and the body of the email becomes the posting itself. Then set your Posterous blog to automatically post to your Twitter account, and voila!, you have pictures, video, and audio in your tweets. This is how I tweeted the showerhead picture from the Singapore Airlines lounge. The Posterous FAQ explains it all. An alternative for posting pictures is TwitPic. It is also quite easy to use to tweet pictures, and it is integrated with TweetDeck.
  8. Twitterfeed. This website enables you to automatically post RSS feeds as tweets. I use it, for example, to automatically post all Truemors posts as if they were tweets from me. When you really trust a site’s feeds, I recommend that you incorporate Twitterfeed to reduce the burden of manually finding good content.”
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How to Pick Up Followers on Twitter

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Image via CrunchBase

“How do I get more followers on Twitter?”

Or maybe the question is “How do I get any followers on Twitter?”

Since Twitter is a game changer, you definitely want to a.) learn to use it and b.) keep increasing your following with the result of raising your profile.

As I’ve already confessed, I’m no expert on Twitter.  I’m a novice, a newbie.  Perhaps you are too.  If you are, Guy Kawasakid knows all the rules and all the tricks of the trace.  He has a huge following on Twitter. 21,000 at last count. ( And you want a  huge following too, I presume.  I mean, that’s what blowing your own horn to succeed is all about.)  In Looking for Mr. Goodtweet: How to Pick Up Followers on Twitter, Kawasaki lays out all the rules of the game.

Tip 1: Follow the “smores (social media whores*).” They are the folks with large number of followers and seem to be the opinion leaders (and perhaps even “heros”) of Twitter. You can get a good idea of who they are by viewing Twitterati.alltop, TwitterCounter, and Egos.alltop. There are three reasons to follow them: first, many have scripts that will auto follow you; second, you might learn something from watching what they tweet about; third, when people look at your profile to see who you follow, you want to appear that you have a clue. (*originally coined by @worleygirl who passed it to @pauladrum who passed it to me)

Tip 2: Send @ messages to the smores. They probably won’t answer you, but that’s okay. All you want to do is appear like you have a relationship with them to enhance your credibility. The theory is, “If she is tweeting with @scobleizeer, she must be worth following.” Bull shiitake logic, admittedly, but it helps. To bastardize what a famous PR person once told me, “It’s not who you know. It’s who appears to know you.”

Tip 3: Create an effective avatar. Your avatar is a window into your soul, so you need to create one that doesn’t look like you shot it with a camera phone while you were drunk. In most cases, use a simple, informal straight-up photo of just your face—not you and your dog, car, kids, or surfboard. Increase the exposure to brighter than you think it should be. Fix the red-eye. Crop the photo because Twitter is going to display it as a postage-stamp size image. If you can’t fix up your photo, send it to Fixmyphotos. Upload a large version of it (approximately 500 x 500 pixels) and let Twitter scale it down, so that when people zoom on your photo, they can see your gorgeousness and not an ugly pixelated image.

kristi_biz2.png Picture 7.jpg warhol40x40.jpg Picture 9.jpgIf you have access to cool image tools, then create an avatar that raises the question, “How did he do that?” (That’s the category I think my current avatar is in.) If you represent a company, then use its logo—but this is boring (sorry, Tony). Avatars with cleavage may help you get followers that you wouldn’t want, but that’s your call. Bottom line: When people view a stream of tweets, your avatar (and therefore your tweet) should stand out.

Tip 4: Follow everyone who follows you. When I first started on Twitter, Robert Scoble told me to follow everyone who followed me. “But why, Robert, would I follow everyone like that?” The answer is that it’s courteous to do so and because when you do, some people will respond to you and eveyone who follows them will see this—which is more exposure for you.

Having said this, when you get to more than fifty or so followers, it’s impossible to read what all your followers tweet. At that point, you have to focus on direct private messages (“Ds”) and direct public messages (“@s””).

Tip 5: Always be linking. The fact that your cat rolled over or your flight is delayed isn’t interesting, so get outside of your mundanity and link to interesting stories and pictures—you should think of yourself as a one-person StumbleUpon. The Twitter pickup artist’s mantra is ABL (“Always Be Linking”).

Fortunately, you don’t have to find these sites by yourself because there are companies and communities who are dedicated to this task. Here are my best sources.

  1. StumbleUpon. People in the StumbleUpon community mark sites that they find interesting. You can install the StumbleUpon button by clicking here and go from site to site; you can visit the StumbleUpon recently popular websites list; or you can add this feed to your feed reader. Sample picture.
  2. Alltop. If you’ve ever seen me post ten tweets in a row with links to (what I consider) interesting sites, it’s because I’m parked in front of these four Alltop sites: Psychology.alltop, Science.alltop, Lifehacks.alltop, and SocialMedia.alltop. At any of these sites you can scan hundreds of stories at a time and pick off the ones that will attact followers. (Disclosure: I am co-founder of the site).
  3. CNN. CNN is hard to beat for up-to-the minute news. You’ll be competing with CNN’s own tweets which has 52,000 followers as of today, but still leaves you about five million other Twitter users to attract. Seriously, you can attract followers just by cherrypicking the best of CNN stores. To do this, you need immediate notification of breaking news, and CNN’s email alerts are as good as it gets. Click here to sign up. This is its recent stories RSS feed, but email notification is faster and therefore better for the purpose of attracting followers. Sample: “Monks Brawl Before Religious Holiday.”
  4. New York Times. Like CNN, the New York Times is a lovely source for links because it provides both up-to-the minute news as well as carefully crafted, intellectual stories. This is its home page RSS feed. You can also pick from a bunch of feeds here. You and your readers do have to register, but it’s worth it— perhaps the only site that is worth registering for on the Internet. Sample: “A Political Manners Manual.”
  5. Buzzfeed. Buzzfeed is a also a community of people looking for interesting stuff. You can visit its home page to find stuff or subscribe to its RSS feed. Samples: “Lunch Bag Art” and “Young People Love Obama.”
  6. Truemors. This is the much criticized site that I started a while ago. I’ve subsequently sold the site to NowPublic. Like it or not, the stories at Truemors are carefully selected and highly edited. The woman behind Truemors, Annie Colbert, is an extremely good writer and editor. Its feed is here. Sample: “Facebook Tops BBC in UK Traffic.”
  7. Newswise. Newswise is “a trusted resource for knowledge-based news, embargoed research results, and expert contacts from the world’s leading research institutions: universities, colleges, laboratories, professional organizations, governmental agencies, and private research groups active in the fields of medicine, science, business, and the humanities.” Holy kaw! In other words, it features hardcore science. Some stories are embargoed and you have to register to prove you’re a journalist for them, but even the stuff that’s not embargoed is very good. Its RSS feed is here. Sample: “New Generator Produces AC Current by Stretching Wires.”
  8. ZDNet. If you want to push out info-tech links for nerds and geeks, it’s hard to beat ZDNet. Just about every day there’s some story that will interest the 95% of the world that uses Windows. ZDNet pushes out email notification here, and its RSS feed is here. Sample: “In Depth Look at Windows 7.”
  9. Digg. Many people think that Digg is a good place to find stuff that approximately 100 forty-year old men living with their parents find interesting. I don’t use it very often because that’s not who I’m trying to pick up, but you can find many few gems there. Its main RSS feed is here, and you can find specialized feeds here. Sample: “Gears of War 2 sells 2.1 million copies on day 1.”
  10. Kirtsy. Kirtsy on the other hand is “Digg for chicks.” It’s a social networking site where women post and rate stories. The stories here range from mommy/homey stuff to “Liz Hurley’s Boobs: They’re Real and They’re Fantastic” (I’m not making this up). Its links are particularly effective to attract female followers and sensitive men (oxymoron?). Its RSS feed is here. Sample: “5 Jobs You Wanted as a Kid (And Why They Suck).”
  11. Techmeme. Techmeme makes no bones about it: it uses technology to find the hottest tech stories. It’s a community of one: Gabe Rivera, and he’s a good guy. Where ZDNet usually contains ITish stories, Techmeme casts a bigger net for anything tech. Its feed is here. Sample: “Google CEO on Obama Tech Czar Job: No Thanks”.
  12. Bonus: Rewrite the headline. Here’s a power tip for you. The most powerful way to start a headline on Twitter is with the words such as ”How to… ” and “Why… ,” so don’t hesitate to blow out the existing headline and rewrite it to make it more interesting and relevant to the kind of followers you seek.

    Double Bonus: Scan Goodtweet.alltop. To make it easier for you to scan the best sites for interesting links, we created Goodtweet.alltop. It aggregates the the feeds mentioned above plus my favorites from the various Alltop sites to make life even easier for you.

Tip 6: Establish yourself as a subject expert. One thing is for sure about Twitter: there are some people interested in every subject and every side of every subject. By establishing yourself as a subject expert, you will make yourself interesting to some subset of people.

Step 1 is to actually be an expert—but that’s beyond the scope of this posting. Step 2 is to find tweets that you can supplement (I explain how to find these tweets below in the TweetDeck and Twellow sections in Tip 8). Example 1: you’re an expert on Macintosh. Search for “Macintosh” and answer people’s questions. Example 2: you’re an expert in public speaking. Search for “Powerpoint,” “keynote,” and “speech” to add value to tweets. People are likely to not only follow you, but also retweet your posts and therefore give you additional exposure.

And if/when you are an expert, don’t be afraid to express your opinion. It’s better that some people follow you and some people refuse to follow you than no one knows who you are at all. There are so many people on Twitter that some are likely to agree with you.

Tip 7: Incorporate pictures and other media. Who can resist a tweet such as “Picture of my new puppy”? Nobody, that’s who. And your topic doesn’t have to be anything as sweet as a puppy. I’ve tweeted pictures of shower heads from Microsoft in the Singapore Airlines lounge, the world’s longest toilet flush, and two sacred cows in Mumbai to get followers, so I know multimedia works. The key is the tweet leading to the picture. Stuff like ““If Microsoft made shower heads,” “World’s longest toilet flush,” and “two sacred kaws/cows” works. (See reference to Posterous below to see how I post pictures and video.)

Tip 8: Use the right tools. At the end of the day, you either have many followers or you don’t. A good effort doesn’t count, so you might as well use the right tools to make picking up followers as easy as possible.

(This is a such a large and important slice of managing Twitter, I’m giving it it’s own post at Twitter Tools.)  But it’s critical to know and use these, so be sure to go there.)

Tip 9: Repeat your tweets. Try this experiment: take your most interesting tweets (as measured by how many people retweet them, perhaps) and post them again three times, eight to twelve hours apart. I used to think that people would complain about repeating tweets, but I’ve never had a complaint. My theory is that the volume of tweets is so high and most people check in at about the same time every day, so people don’t notice repeat tweets.

Tip 10: Ask people to follow. That’s right just come right out and ask them to follow you. For example, I’m here if you want to follow me.

So now you’re on the road to being a Twitter celeb.  And Kawasaki’s final words of advice are:

“Always be linking.”

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Sold On Twitter!

Guy Kawasaki, American venture capitalist and ...
Image via Wikipedia

Guy Kawasaki says he’s so sold on Twitter. He thinks Twitter is “arguably the most powerful branding mechanism since television.” In fact, Kawasaki said he’d rather give up his cell phone for a week than Twitter. And you know what a deprivation that would be.

Kawasaki, who I’m sure you know, is the original technology evangelist, starting years ago with Apple, then with his book Art of the Start, his blogs, his many companies, including AllTop, and just released new book, Reality Check: the Irrreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition.

Well, he’s the guy I turn to when wanting to learn more about LinkedIn, Twitter, social media and a lot of powerful dynamics behind entrepreneuring.

Right now I thought you’d like to see what Kawasaki has to say about Twitter.  But I’d also like for you to know what Kawasaki has to say about Twitter and how to use it to gain a following.  That will be coming up.  Here’s the initial take on  Twitter.  Kawasaki is extremely engaging so I think you’ll emjoy it.

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