Kent Huffman is the CMO at BearCom Wireless. You can follow him on Twitter at www.Twitter.com/KentHuffman
Twitter. It’s all the rage in the social media world these days. But how can you best leverage it for tangible business-to-business marketing purposes? One way is to build your own community within Twitter.
Several months ago, I became interested in Twitter when a colleague told me about his positive experiences with the popular social media tool and insisted that I check it out. After signing up for an account and reading a few tweets, I immediately saw its potential as a community development tool. Being a long-time B2B marketer, I decided to build a group of folks interested in marketing who could inspire and help each other grow professionally by sharing ideas and information. But I didn’t know exactly how to go about creating that community.
I ultimately decided to treat it as I would any other important marketing initiative—by first developing a well-defined strategy and a set of related tactics. Over the next couple of months, I created and then tweaked the strategy and honed the tactics through trial and error. I then boiled everything down to a seven-step process that I’m sharing with you here in hopes that you can use it to develop your own B2B community on Twitter.
Step One: Define Your Goals and Target Community
Before you launch your presence on Twitter, determine what specific goals and objectives you want to accomplish. Then parlay that into a methodical plan to build a community around that goal, including defining your target audience.
Step Two: Find and Follow Like-Minded Tweeters
Once you’ve set up a Twitter account, use www.Search.Twitter.com, www.Twellow.com,www.TweepSearch.com, www.TweetBeep.com, and similar tools to find other tweeters who share the same interests as you and would appear to make good members of your fledgling community. Then follow them.
Step Three: Read and Learn
For a week or two, read the tweets posted by those whom you are following and learn from them. Understand what their interests are and how they use Twitter to communicate with others. Note which tweets and tweeters are the most appealing to you and why.
Step Four: Create Effective, Compelling Tweets
When you’re ready to begin tweeting, first determine what topics you will write about. One of the most effective strategies is to position yourself as a subject matter expert in one or two areas. Make sure those topics directly relate to the community you’re trying to build. And take a thoughtful approach by writing clever, interesting tweets that are likely to be retweeted by others.
As is the case with pretty much everything on the Internet, content is king on Twitter. Build a strong foundation for your “Twitter brand” and give other tweeters a reason to follow you by adhering to these basic dos and don’ts when composing your tweets…
Do…
· Feature newsworthy items
· Divulge “inside information”
· Share original thoughts and ideas
· Participate in conversations
· Provide useful links
· Ask engaging questions
· Inject personality and humor
· Retweet when appropriate
Don’t…
· Discuss what you had for breakfast
· Tweet too frequently or infrequently
· Ignore questions or comments by other tweeters
· Try to promote your product or service in every tweet
Step Five: Develop Unique Content for Your Community
In addition to writing focused, compelling tweets, another important key to success in building a strong community on Twitter is to create special content that will be of interest to your followers. One of the most effective types of content enables the members of your community to easily find and interact with each other, such as lists of experts and leaders who tweet about subjects that directly pertain to your community. In my case, I developed a series of unique marketing-related lists:
· www.SystemicMarketing.com/top-cmos-on-twitter
· www.SystemicMarketing.com/top-marketing-book-authors-on-twitter
· www.SystemicMarketing.com/top-marketing-professors-on-twitter
Other types of content can be very effective as well, such as blog posts—where you can discuss specific subjects in more detail (such as the post you’re now reading)—and other online and offline resources related to your core topic(s).
By creating this content, you’re providing a forum for your community that enables its members to connect to others like them. As a result, you’ll develop a reputation as a knowledgeable facilitator who is more interested in giving than taking. That can be very powerful.
Step Six: Grow Relationships
As you expand your following on Twitter, you’ll naturally gravitate toward specific tweeters with whom you can most closely relate. Develop a closer relationship with them by publicly commenting on their tweets, retweeting them, and recommending them to your community, as well as privately engaging them in one-on-one conversations, both online and offline. Do whatever you can to help them without asking for anything in return.
Step Seven: Wash, Rinse, and Repeat
Once you’ve found your “Twitter rhythm,” continue to expand your community by growing your followers list, cleaning it up from time to time, and repeating steps two through six indefinitely. You’ll find that creating and participating in your community will be a very rewarding experience, not only for you, but everyone involved.
In the final analysis, building a B2B community on Twitter is about creating value in terms of content and relationships. Even more basic than that, it’s about giving, not taking. That’s really what will help keep your community healthy, active, and growing.
Read the Greenlight360 Case Study that describes how this process has been used to produce real, measurable results on Twitter.
Kent Huffman is the CMO at BearCom Wireless. You can follow him on Twitter atwww.Twitter.com/KentHuffman.



[...] Before you launch your presence on Twitter, determine what specific goals and objectives you want to… – %extended% [...]
Hello. I think the article is really interesting. I am even interested in reading more. How soon will you update your blog?
Glad you like it, Konstantin! I will add a success story to this post in the next couple of weeks.
Kent – great post and advice. I have seen this in action as you and I have been following each other for a few months. You consistently add value to your followers and adhere to one of the basic tenets I think makes people popular. That is, giving without the expectation of getting back. You give content, rt stuff, create a #marketingmonday recommendation etc.
A couple of other thoughts:
The notion of community in twitter is in fact a self defined community. You decide who you want to follow and you therefore define your community. I find I have to remind myself that the trends I find in twitter are the trends for my community, not for other communities or broad based topics (like MJ).
Agree that content is king and the nice thing is that people or brands can create content at a very low price (or for free). That said, companies that shift production budgets to create content specifically for sm will stand out in a big way. Short videos, cool apps, professional podcast, user generate content, promotions and contests…. creativity still matters it is just at a different scale then a $100k website or a $150K direct mail piece.
Last one. Is it me, or do you notice that hardly any agency people are active in social media? I went to a Twitter conference a few months back in SF and there was only one other agency person out of the 300 or so attendees. The vast majority of people were client side marketers.
Kent:
My early twitter use has been enhanced by following you from day one. You daily tweets are valuable. I follow about 60% of your FF suggestions. I was delighted the day I made your most followed marketing prof list. This advise on creating community may be the final piece you provide to aid the twitter experience.
Thanks!
Gary
This is just one of the best posts I have seen about this. As you so clearly lay out, it is a system that you must follow and commit to. Excellent post, thanks for having this out here.
[...] Seven Steps to Creating a B2B Community on Twitter | Social2b http://www.social2b.com/index.php/2009/06/15/seven-steps-to-creating-a-b2b-community-on-twitter – view page – cached The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Creating a B2B Community on Twitter, by Kent Huffman, CMO at BearCom Wireless. You can follow Ken on Twitter at http://www.Twitter.com/KentHuffman., — From the page [...]
Kent,
This is SO helpful! Thanks for sharing; I appreciate the insight.
Chris
Seven Steps to Creating a B2B Community on Twitter | Social2b…
Kent Huffman outlines seven steps to developing a community through Twitter. Kent’s strategy comes from several month of trial and error and is a great help to those building their own community….
[...] developed and followed at Greenlight360 is identical to the process that I wrote about in my recent Social2B blog post. It’s straightforward and effective, and it can be applied to almost any situation on [...]
A little offtopic reply, Im using the new google chrome browser, but it looks like your website is not displaying correctly… Just to let you know. Thanks.
I found your blog on Google. I’ve bookmarked it and will watch out for your next blog post.
I like the listen step the most, you really dont want to just jump in once you meet a group of people on twitter. Finding out a way to interact in the conversation is easier than starting the topic right away. You want to know what to talk about before diving in. Content is king after you get in the group and create a niche for yourself, good post!
Fantastic post, I really look forward to updates from you.
Very useful information for business kind of people. I too have small business on twitter, your article tells very brief about B2B. Thanks
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