What NOT to Tweet: 10 Ways to Commit Social Media Suicide

Social Media by Matt Hamm via Flickr. All Rights Reserved 2009.

Social media lets us be ourselves under beer-goggled presumptions that people will accept us for who we are. WRONG!

Avoid committing social media suicide:

Speaking of beer goggles, just as you have been advised not to drink and drive, drunk dial or drunken text, the same rule applies to Twitter, Facebook and all your other outlets:

  • Do not drunk tweet your social network. It will be there when you wake up for all the world to see.

As little children our parents taught us to be humble, take things with a grain of salt – not fling it back at those who got us mad:

While, the internet is a great place to build your image, help you get a job, increase your social network and catch up with old friends, it can also destroy all of that in one simple click:

  • Be careful what you say. It takes weeks, months and often years to build a following. It takes a second to alienate them all.

So you have a job and it … sucks. You complain to your friends, your family and anyone who will listen. But understand something, whining about your professional downturns on the internet can be replicated, saved and come back to haunt you with a vengeance. On typical social media outlets (Twitter, Facebook, MySpace etc.) remember to avoid saying or doing anything that can endanger your job — or make people think you’ve simply lost your bloody mind and get you fired:

You are new to the world of social media. All your friends are jumping on the wagon of “add me” and “follow” so you want to too:

  • Do not massively add/follow/friend loads of people in hopes of them adding/following/friending you back, only to un-add/follow/friend them because you want to boost up your numbers. Social media is about sharing and communicating; it’s not all about you.

I know you’re super excited about your new blog post and you want to tell the world about it. Heck, I do too! But there is a fine line between sharing the information you bring to the table and spamming anyone within a wireless distance. Use a rule of seven:

  • For every seven posts you tweet (on Twitter, for example) tweet one for yourself.

Same mentality goes for Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn. These are more of your professional and very personal networks. Don’t bombard your friends on these outlets with every detail, of every little thing, you share and do via the likes of Twitter:

Traffic was horrible on your way to work, your dog ate part of your presentation, you are wearing two totally different coloured socks, you forgot your bagel on the kitchen counter, you just spilt coffee on yourself and your iPod cannot identify a radio station to stream through, so you are stuck listening to static. I give you my sympathy. But seriously…

  • Do not whine and moan about your woe-is-me all the time online. (Unless of course the above really did happen to you, as it would make an amusing story)

Photo by Foto D via Flickr. All Rights Reserved 2009.

Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and MySpace have built-in status updates or are based around status updates. While, I’m interested in knowing what you want to share with me, so I can reciprocate and we can learn together, I frankly do not care, and do not want to know, that you ran out of toilet paper via your Twitterberry application:

First impressions do count; as does second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth. Don’t try to be thinner, smarter, savvier, sexier, wealthier, poorer, prettier, or –er than the next person out there. Eventually, you will slip and your fall will not be pretty. This is not the 19th century and you are not Degas, your fixation with Miley Cyrus could land you in jail.

  • Be yourself, keep it smart, keep it real and keep the inner creepy to a minimum.

 

This is Part One of the ‘Suicide Series.’

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Sasha Muradali runs the ‘Little Pink Book’ . She holds a B.S. in Public Relations and an M.A. in International Administration.

Copyright © 2009 Sasha H. Muradali. All Rights Reserved.

TGIF: Tweeting trends #AnnoyAtrekkie & #ApatheticBond to end a flustering week, #FollowFriday

It’s Friday (#FollowFriday in Twitter-land) and time to let your hair down out of the strung up, tight-knitted bun it’s been in all week.

twitter-logo

What better way to do so than with some purposeless rubbish in the form of a couple of laughs via the social media, Kingdom of Twitter? 

This week, the Twitter world has been reeling over some creative (and not so much) tweets about Star Trek, Bond and childhood memories.

Below are just a few highlights, to make you laugh and tell yourself, THANK-GOD-IT’S-FRIDAY! And in the tradition of all things Twitterific, #FollowFriday these Tweeps. No harm, no foul.

(P.S., if you are new to Twitter and have no idea what I’m talking about go here.)

#ApatheticBond
@MitchBenn: What about “Unipussy?”
@rgphotographic: Roger Less
@jockso: Probable Best Not To Say Never Again, But It’s Up To You Really
@psmorrison: A Teaspoon Of Solace
@ihateyourad: “Never Say Never Again — Unless You Need To. Who Am I To Say?”
@roboticmonkey: Dr. Oh alright then, but just this once
@TheToyDetective: For Four Eyes Only (n.b. I can say that, I’m bespectacled)
@echtburge: A View To Wishing He’d Just Piss Off And Die 

#WhenIWereALad
@SashaHalima Pluto was a planet.
@captain_doodle: Lucozade came with a satisfyingly crinkly translucent amber wrap which u could put over ur eyes to create yellow robot vision
@thom_white: Neapolitan ice cream was considered exotic. And so was pasta, garlic, curry & spaghetti bolognaise. Wine was posh!
@lesanto: A snowball was a ladies drink not a ladies sex act
@lesanto: You didn’t have ‘personality disorders’ you were just an a**hole�
@saruuh123: Furbys were kings… 

#AnnoyATrekkie
@DJ_Minja Death Star blows up the Enterprise http://tinyurl.com/qka6ld
 @a_rocket_can “Picard, I am your Father!” – Noooooooooooooooo!”
@livin4hymn So…Vader is Pickard who is also Kirk’s father, right?
@SashaHalima me-sah lied, LAST one, promise RT @purplehayz: They should never have had that Jar Jar Binks run the bar on the Enterprise
@CYMarin1 Spock is the one with the ribs on his forehead, right?
@pixelbuffer: I hope they bring the Ewoks back in the next Star Trek, they’re so cute. I love that Chewbacca’s have kids too.
@sShap so that’s why Kirk and Spock look so young. They regenerated! (and #DrWho)

@thewinekone: If I was a Vulcan, I’d use my nerve pinch on your ****.
@Jezriyah: I can’t wait for the scene where Kirk negotiates a 5-star hotel room for 2-star prices.

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Sasha Muradali runs the ‘Little Pink Book’ .

Copyright © 2009 SashaHalima PR. All rights reserved

Twitter’s New Role in the World of Sports

By: Darren Heitner, guest blogger

Twitter is the new medium for athlete message distribution, because it allows athletes and their managers to broadcast their messages without any filtration.

Over the past few months, Twitter has seen substantial increases in its membership, coverage, and funding.  Most impressively, the social networking tool has seen large growth in the world of sports, an area that is often reluctant to embracing change.  As newspapers are folding and sports journalists are being laid off by the day, a new sports writer is emerging: the professional athlete.  With Twitter, guys like Shaq can talk directly to their fans without worrying that some writer is going to mis-quote them in an online or print piece.  The message is broadcast immediately and is more genuine.  Additionally, Twitter allows Shaq’s fans to respond to his Tweets.  It is a conversation instead of a one-way communication.

Many other athletes have jumped on the Twitter bandwagon lately.  One player has been reprimanded for Tweeting at half-time of an important game and an NBA owner was fined for Tweeting about a bad call by a referee.  Some teams hate the new technology, others like the Phoenix Suns, embrace it.  The Suns have practically every person in their organization on Twitter and have leveraged the service to gain more interaction with its fans and increase ticket sale drives.

Will Twitter put more sports journalists out of business?  How will PR managers control their athlete clients when all it takes is a text message from a phone to blast a message out to over 500,000 people?  These are some interesting questions to ponder.

Darren Heitner has more experience in the sports agent industry than most people that are more than twice his age. He has created the first sports agent blog on the internet, SportsAgentBlog.com, which receives upwards of 5,000 unique visits per day from agents, athletes, media sources, and the general public.

 

 Copyright © 2009 SashaHalima PR. All rights reserved.

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