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Sarah Worsham

Sarah Worsham / Dec 17, 2008

Finding Twitter Influencers to Follow

influence4rbReader Steven Woods had a great question that I think might be useful to others, so I’m sharing it in a post (thanks for the question,Steven!):

Have you seen any good tools for understanding who is the most influential in a given subject? Measurements and/or ranking of network/relevance/retweets?

Here are a few tools that can help find the influencers for a subject or in your network:

Mr. Tweet will analyze your network and followers and suggest who you should be following back as well as influencers outside of your network.

TwitterGrader will give you a suggested list of people to follow based on keywords in your own tweets.

Twellow won’t necessarily give you influencers, but it is a directory of tweeters by subject, so it can help you find people in an industry to follow.

TweetScan, TwitScoop, TweetDeck and Twitter all give you the ability to search on a keyword and see what people have said about it. I happen to monitor a few keywords using TweetDeck and have found it useful for finding new people to follow and connect with.

If anyone has any other tools or methods, please feel free to share.

(photo by 4RB @ Flickr CC)

Technorati Tags: twitter, social networks, social media, internet marketing, social media marketing, social media strategy, internet business strategy

Sarah Worsham / Dec 16, 2008

8 Places to Syndicate Your Business Content

broadcastsoundman1024Now that you understand RSS, you can use it to syndicate your content to other places on the Internet.  Part of your content strategy should be syndicating or publishing your content in multiple places online.  The more places you can use the same piece of content, the more return you’ll get for your effort. Here are some places to consider:

  1. Twitter – Using Twitterfeed you can automatically tweet the title and a link to any of your content (website, blog, delicious) that has a RSS feed.
  2. LinkedIn – LinkedIn has added the ability to add blog and twitter content (both of which have RSS feeds) right to your LinkedIn profile.
  3. FaceBook – There is a Twitter application that will send your tweets right to your Facebook page (as status updates) and with Notes you can have any RSS feeds show up as well.  If you create a page for your business, you can have your content show up there as well.
  4. BlogCatalog – A social network to connect with other bloggers, use your rss feeds to syndicate content from twitter, your blog, delicious, etc.
  5. MyBlogLog – Another social network to connect with other bloggers.
  6. FriendFeed – An easy way for your friends and connections to see all of your content from various sources in one place.
  7. Plaxo – A Business social network, you can syndicate content from your blog, twitter, etc. using your RSS feeds.
  8. Your Social Networks – Many social networks will allow you to add a feed to your content.  If not, consider copying and pasting your content to show up on your social networks.

The more places your content is, the higher chance you’ll be able to provide some useful information to a potential customer.  Keep in mind that your content needs to be useful to others – not just marketing or PR.

(photo by soundman1024 @ Flickr CC)

Technorati Tags: content, rss, content strategy, strategy, internet marketing, internet business strategy

Sarah Worsham / Dec 15, 2008

RSS – Syndicate Your Content

syndicationcogdogblogRSS, or Really Simple Syndication, is a way to automatically syndicate your content in ways that other people can easily read or aggregate it.  RSS is formatted in XML which allows your feed to be published once but viewed by many different programs.  If you have a blog on WordPress or Blogger (and others) or use Twitter, then you already have RSS feeds.  If you subscribe to blogs using Google Reader or iGoogle, you are subscribing to the RSS feeds from these blogs.

RSS is largely invisible to most people.  As I mentioned above, you may already be using RSS feeds without being aware of them.  However, just knowing you have RSS feeds with various content services means you can easily use these feeds to syndicate your content to wider audiences (which we’ll discuss in the next post).  To see if a webpage has an RSS feed, you can look for links which say “subscribe to this blog” or “subscribe to this website”.  Sometimes the feeds will also just say “RSS” or have a icon that looks like this: A website may have a feed, but it may not be obvious – try subscribing to the website using Google Reader or iGoogle – both will try to find the feed for you.

(photo by cogdogblog @ Flickr CC)

Technorati Tags: content, rss, content strategy, strategy, internet marketing, internet business strategy

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About Sazbean


Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

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