Asher Kelman
OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Spread the word. Follow us on Twitter and chirp @OPFWEB to your friends!
Would you please!
Thanks!
Asher
Would you please!
Thanks!
Asher
I shall leave that up to the youthful souls here at OPF.
I live a blissfully Tweet, MySpace, FaceBook and i-Pacifier free life...
Hi Asher,Spread the word. Follow us on Twitter and chirp @OPFWEB to your friends!
Would you please!
Thanks!
Asher
So who is using 'social media' as part of their marketing?
No disrespect, Asher, but I really don't have any interest in your stream-of-consciousness twits. (You already leave plenty here! ;-) )
1. Follow relevant tweeps.
Build your Twitter community around a photography-oriented ecosystem — following photographers, photography magazines, agencies, stylists, galleries, etc. Don’t dilute your account by following everything that interests you (for instance, your gym, recipe posts, gardening, etc). The personal interests can be a separate account.
2. Tweet with your followers in mind.
If you are serious about using Twitter to grow your photography business, you should not be treating it as a diary or a life cam. You should keep your tweets on target, messaging about topical areas in photography, the imaging world, equipment, photo tips — as well as your own work.
Twitter is like making small talk at a bar
Facebook is like a gathering of friends.