11.16.2009

Hashtags Make Twitter Work Harder

Sure, it’s interesting to following friends and colleagues on Twitter just to see what they’re up to. But many of us are vexed about the actual usefulness of the tool. Still others have shied away from incorporating Twitter into marketing plans because it can’t be easily controlled. Yet, that’s the real beauty of the tool: microblogging is a grassroots tool that allows you to collect attendee feedback and capture emerging trends in their infancy.

To get the most out of twitter for your next meeting or event, make the application work harder for you in just two steps.

Step 1: Create a hashtag. A hashtag is a shortened version of a few related keywords that allows people to categorize their posts. A sample hashtag for the XYZ Annual Conference might be #XYZ2010. Twitter’s functionality allows clickable searching by hashtag, and allows you to sort out only posts related to your event. To be useful, keep your hashtag short and descriptive – remember, these are people who have to communicate their entire thought in 140 characters or less!

Step 2: Publicize your hashtag in all conference materials. Ask some of your energetic supporters, volunteers, speakers, or staff to blog about your event regularly (once per week or more) and include your hashtag. The more interesting their tweets, the more likely they’ll be retweeted (forwarded to others) and the more publicity you’ll get.

Onsite, publicize your hashtag in all materials: in the program, on the conference bag, on the back of staff shirts, on slides during the plenary session …. well, you get the picture. Encourage attendees to tweet about the sessions they’re in and their experience overall. The feedback you collect will be piecemeal, but honest and timely.


Data mining of attendee and member tweets can show you entirely new dimensions of their needs and expectations – and allow you to provide products and services that meet those needs and expectations before anyone else. Regularly monitored, Twitter is like an ongoing virtual focus group. Get tweeting!

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