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Scott practices what he preaches and the proof is in his now almost 140,000 followers.
by Scott Bourne

I found this older post by good  buddy, Scott Bourne. It's still so accurate and it fits so well with my post this morning about the quest to find new customers.  It’s ten points to help you be more effective in your use of twitter, blogging and podcasting.

At the time Scott wrote this he had 25,000 followers on Twitter. Today, he’s one of the most followed photographers on Twitter and is approaching 140,000 followers!  He practices what he preaches and has proven over and over again how these tips can help you expand your presence.  SkipCohen

Here are some tips I’ve found useful as I use these communications technologies to spread the word about my
work.

These tips have all worked for me. I don’t offer them as a set of rules or even guidelines. I offer them as pure information that you can use or ignore. Just remember, they worked for me.

1. Remember that blogs, podcasts and social media sites WHEN COMBINED are 10 times more effective than when used alone. When I JUST blogged, I had a good audience. When I started podcasting and blogging, my
audience grew much larger. When I added social networking (Twitter) my audience grew tremendously. If you do just one of these things, you’ll see benefit. Do all three and you’ll see that benefit multiplied by
more than three.

2. Blogging, podcasting and Tweeting are all about communicating. As photographers, we all feel the need to communicate. Otherwise we wouldn’t make and share photos. Remember that you need to be accessible to communicate. I put my telephone number, email address and snail mail address out there on almost everything I do. I want to be reachable. What’s the point of sharing a photo that moves someone if they don’t have a way to respond?

3. Respond to your audience when they ask for help or ask a sincere question.

4. Ignore your audience when they are complaining due to their false belief that they are ENTITLED to something from you other than the free gift you give them of your time. Also ignore trolls. No good can ever, ever, ever come of responding to them.

5. Try to use your blog, podcast and Twitter sites to solve problems. Everyone likes a problem solver.

6. Be consistent. Blog or podcast once every hour, or every day or every other day or every other week, but be consistent. This applies less to Twitter but you should try to Tweet at least once per day to keep your followers interested.

7. Don’t spend too much time worrying about SEO and search marketing. If you offer targeted, niche content of high quality on a regular basis, you’ll outscore the best SEO-driven site every time.

8. When you first start out in blogs, podcasting and social media, listen first, talk second. Listen more than you talk. Only talk when you REALLY have something to say.

9. When you launch, you’ll have few in your audience. Be patient. Don’t start counting followers on Twitter until you hit 1000. Then you have real traction. Until then, you’re just ramping up and still
learning. Don’t be discouraged. Keep at it. It took me one year to get my first 4000 Twitter followers. It’s taken me 10 months to add 31,000 more.

10. Be generous. Be generous with your time, your knowledge and your gifts. Yes, prizes and giveaways are a form of generosity. It’s a form I use well and often. But you need to also be generous in human ways
in order to gain real traction.
 


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    Authors

    Skip Cohen is President of SCU, founder of Marketing Essentials International and past president of Rangefinder Publishing and WPPI. He's been an active participant in the photographic industry since joining Hasselblad USA in 1987 as president.  He has co-authored six books on photography and actively supports dozens of projects each year involving photographic education. 

    Scott Bourne is Dean of Marketing at SCU and is a professional photographer and educator with more than three decades of photographic experience. He's authored seven photography books and taught more than 200 photo workshops. His work has been published in more than 250 books, newspapers, magazines and web sites. 

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