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There are a lot of people jumping into Social Media. Setting up Twitter pages, Facebook groups, jumping into FriendFeed or whatever the latest gimmick or hot spot is. I like to think that they coming for the right reasons. To be a part of a community of like minded professionals, to chat with friends, to meet people that share similiar hobbies, interests, etc or even to talk about their accomplishments to people that opted in to listen.
The problem most companies, business or individuals face is that they enter the club without knowing what crowd is there.
Imagine walking into a night club expecting to see a rock band:
This is my problem with a lot of the marketing going on with Twitter. My latest case in point is Music Marketer David Hooper. I think most of his articles are good and offer value to his readers. I had a problem though with his latest e-book on Twitter for musicians.
I value Twitter, and the relationships that I have on the site. I agree that being an early adopter gives you an advantage and extra vision before the bandwagon comes in. Where I disagree is the fact that Hooper is not a good Twitter user. In fact, he doesn't follow anyone. He does not participate in conversation. He does not use a tracker to see conversations about his own name, let alone music marketing conversations that are happening across the platform. Oh, and the link spam is just awesome.
If you do not understand the platform, do not tell others to abuse the system. It will destroy the community that Ev Williams and Biz Stone have created and that so many of us love. You cannot "master Twitter in 10 minutes a day." If you think so, you are missing the conversations. You are not getting to know your fans, your peers or witness the beauty of the site. It's just blind, waste of time promotions.
With all Social Networks and Social Media sites, you need a 2-way conversation. Where Myspace failed was not in its crappy architecture, it was in the users who abused it for promotion, and the bigger bands who never wrote back, kept their site static and had a 1-way conversations with their fans.
They pushed out news. They pushed out shows. They NEVER listened.
Before you walk in the club, find some people who go there. Find users who use the site and get results and conversions.
Grooveshark is a company that gets Twitter. Andrew Wise, their business relations partner, has his ears glued to every mention of the work Grooveshark, and is sure that within minutes there is a response made.
I remember saying that I was looking for an oldie on Grooveshark via a Tweet, and within seconds, a message from @Grooveshark asked if I found what I was looking for.
The key to Social Media is to listen. Are you listening?

What an interesting perspective on social media! To be honest, I've read a lot about to use social media to perpetuate your personal brand, build an online presence, blah blah blah, but I've never heard the concept of it being a 2-way interaction expressed. This is important to keep in mind!

Thanks Erika. I think Social Media is a great way to perpetuate your personal brand, but if you are not interacting, its just a static site/profile, getting lost amongst all the others. Thanks for dropping by BC and hope to hear from you again!
Thanks for informative and helpful post,
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