19th Jan 2012

5 Apps to Help Manage Your Twitter Account


1. Tweepi




Tweepi's "Flush" option allows you to see the users you follow who are not following you back. Its "Reciprocate" option allows you to see the users following you who you're not following back. And the "Cleanup" option allows you to see everyone who you're following so you can unfollow as many users as you like.

You can also see who your friends are following, follow full lists and follow other users based on who they follow.

Tweepi displays the users in helpful columns by showing their names, bios, locations, number of tweets, number of followers, number of users they follow, dates of their last tweets, their Klout scores and more.

Click here to view this gallery.

Elijah Daniel is an up-and-coming writer and comedian. He aims to make people smile via his Twitter and YouTube accounts.

As a Twitter enthusiast, it’s always nice to find useful apps that help to manage my account. Check out five of the best apps I use regularly by clicking through the gallery above.

More About: apps, contributor, features, Social Media, trending, Twitter


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17th Jan 2012

6 Tips for Handling Breaking Crises on Twitter


Dallas Lawrence is the chief global digital strategist for Burson-Marsteller, one of the world’s leading public relations and communications firms. He is a Mashable contributor on emerging media trends, online reputation management and digital issue advocacy. You can connect with him on Twitter @dallaslawrence.

If the past year has taught us anything about reputation management in the social age, it’s that the past year has not taught us anything. Time and time again in 2011, the same missteps and misunderstandings lead to the same predictably painful reputational outcomes for individuals, brands and organizations.

Despite widely discussed and accepted social media best practices, many of the most significant crisis poster children of 2011 failed to deploy the basic digital tactics necessary to cauterize potential threats before they metastasized into full-blown reputational disasters.

Some may be tempted to fault the dizzying speed of digital change for the current sad state of crisis preparedness, but the reality is that the basic rules of effective communications have not changed for generations.

From Gutenburg to Zuckerberg, the principles of sincerity, transparency, accuracy and speed still largely determine success or failure in the court of public opinion. What has changed – and what will continue to evolve over time — are the platforms that we use to communicate these principles. No platform in 2011 had a more profound impact on crisis awareness and response than Twitter.

In 2012, as its audience continues to swell past 100 million active users, who send more than a quarter billion tweets daily, Twitter’s prominence – especially during times of crisis — will only continue to grow.

Here are six Twitter crisis tips every communications professional should review in the New Year.


1. Start With The Basics


The first step in 2012 may both be the easiest and possibly the most daunting: For those not yet on Twitter, the time has come to pull the trigger.

Even if your organization does have a Twitter account, you should assess if the current handle is appropriate for managing a crisis conversation. Establishing a separate and transparent Twitter presence for communicating corporate messaging and thought leadership – aside from branded, marketing-focused conversations — is critical if you are going to successfully manage a crisis or reputation in 140 characters or less. Furthermore, companies shouldn’t be polluting their happily massaged community with apologies, recall information or other critical commentary. Many companies now operate multiple accounts specifically to address the information needs of a diverse social marketplace.

For Twitter, one size definitely does not fit all and one Twitter account may not be sufficient for your communications needs.


2. Traditional Media Uses Twitter


A recent survey of approximately 500 journalists around the world found that approximately half of those polled use Twitter to source for stories. In times of crisis, reporters are turning to Twitter in greater numbers to see who is talking about the issue and to identify which sources would best complement their coverage.

In many cases, to be part of the story, you must already be part of the conversation on Twitter. And standard newspapers and magazines are not alone: Newswires like AP and Reuters also report important breaking news and international crises via Twitter. Know and engage your Reuters reporter and recognize that the moment his coverage goes live, your Twitter efforts will need to kick into high gear.


3. Fight for the Headline


Any PR person worth his mettle knows the value of a headline. In the digital space in 2012, fighting for the headline has taken on new meaning. With most news sites offering auto-generated suggested Twitter language for readers to post to their feeds via the retweet plug-in, many tweeters simply “read and retweet” articles using the suggested text.

Unfortunately, rather than invest the time to develop a 140-character synopsis reflective of the entire story, many people or businesses simply auto-populate the original headline, without concern for the false or misleading impression it can have when viewed out of context. An overwhelming number of Twitter users today simply snack on the 140-character content posted in their streams, which means a balanced and comprehensive headline has taken on even greater significance.


4. Video Rules


According to the most recent data from YouTube, more than 500 YouTube links are tweeted every minute. And this doesn’t account for the millions of additional video links embedded in blogs, news sites and other online platforms, which are then shared across Twitter.

Online video has already become one of the most powerful tools in the crisis manager’s arsenal, yet many fail to fully realize the real-time ability of video integrated with Twitter to break through a crowded online conversation. Having an immediately deployable video capability and identified spokesperson(s) ready to advance positive messaging, correct misinformation and engage consumers directly (with a real face, not a logo) can help to reshape perception and stall the advancement of a developing crisis situation in ways one-dimensional text simply cannot.

The question every crisis manger should be asking today is this: If you had a significant crisis occur on a Friday evening, how long would it take you to shoot, edit and tweet a video response?


5. Beware of Squatters


Twitter is still largely the Wild West of the social universe. As Rupert Murdoch’s wife discovered earlier this month, when it comes to transparency, not everyone is playing by the same rule book. Take the time now, before your moment in the spotlight, to audit your brand on Twitter (and throughout the digital space) and see who may be squatting on your trademark. You may be very surprised by what you find.

If there was one lesson learned from the BP oil spill disaster, it was that you need to own your story within Twitter before others hijack it from you. If you do find a squatter violating your Twitter space, Twitter has a well-established policy for reclaiming inappropriate accounts.


6. Don’t be Afraid to Advertise


With more than 250 million tweets flying across the Twittersphere every day, it is important to use every resource at your disposal to break through the incredibly crowded medium.

In times of crisis that require an immediate impact, Twitter’s suite of pay-for-play tools can help do just that. Twitter’s Sponsored Tweets can rapidly keep content at the top of search results, and can now place results at the top of user feeds. A particularly effective feature allows advertisers to target not only key search terms, but key users as well. By targeting based on likes and past conversation threads, Twitter’s timeline advertising allows advertisers to place Promoted Tweets in the timelines of followers and other Twitter users who share similar qualities.

The benefits of this deeper contextual targeting are immediately clear. For example, if you have a major crisis impacting parents, you can identify this subgroup and ensure your message consistently remains at the top of their streams. Messages that link to rich media, use hashtags, and feature a call to action (“RT PLEASE”) will usually garner the most attention. It is important to remember that Sponsored Tweets are just that – tweets you originally post to your account that you then “amplify” with advertising. If you are not active on Twitter and are not posting to your own account, you cannot participate or benefit from the pay-for-play arena.

How have you seen companies handle crises on Twitter? How should they be targeting you, the Twitter user?

More About: crisis, crisis management, features, PUBLIC RELATIONS, Twitter


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11th Jan 2012

Charting the CES Chatter, Wednesday Edition [INFOGRAPHIC]


What were the hottest topics among techies on Twitter during the first official day of CES 2012 on Tuesday?

OLED display technology has had people buzzing about its potential for HDTVs, while ultrabook laptops and tablet devices are also hot. Microsoft has the largest share of tweets tagged #CES this week, but its dominance has dipped since CEO Steve Ballmer’s lackluster keynote Monday evening. Meanwhile, news and social sharing websites have a chokehold on the most-tweeted domain names.

This glimpse into the CES conversation on Twitter comes from Simply Measured analytics. The statistics provide a quantified analysis of who and what is catching the tech world’s attention at one of its biggest annual expositions. Here we offer Simply Measured’s complete findings through end-of-day Tuesday — click here for Mashable‘s coverage of what people talked about during Monday’s unofficial CES kickoff. (CES officially runs Tuesday through Friday, so Monday is referred to as “Day 0″ and Tuesday is referred to as “Day 1.”)


How Does 2012 Compare to Last Year Overall?


People have been tweeting more from CES in 2012 than they did last year, but not by all that much on the event’s second day. Twitter has exploded in use and popularity over the past year, so it makes sense that use at CES has increased. But the tech-savvy CES crowd was likely among the microblogging site’s earlier adopters, so the relative lack of bump adds up too. In both 2012 and 2011, overall #CES-tagged tweets spiked during the evening on Day 0 in anticipation of the event’s first keynote address and during the late morning on Day 1.


What Are the Most-Mentioned Brands?


Microsoft, Samsung and LG had the most mentions on Monday, and nobody came close to those spikes on Tuesday — although Intel did see a nice boost late in the afternoon. Microsoft’s buzz-leading moment is still the hottest of the week, coinciding with Ballmer’s big talk. Motorola, however, did see a nice steady stream of chatter throughout most of Tuesday.


What Are the Hottest Trends?


OLED display technology is a hot topic at CES 2012, gaining more than 1,000 #CES-tagged mentions through the week’s first two days. But its popularity is understandable — LG’s 55-inch OLED-powered HDTV impressed us on Monday. Behind OLED, ultrabooks and tablets are sparking the most interest on Twitter. Gaming and audio technologies have also gained more than 500 mentions apiece. It will be interesting to see if OLED keeps its momentum throughout the week, as well as what other trends emerge in the conversation.


Which Domains Are People Tweeting Most?


It’s not a surprise that news and social sharing sites dominate the list of most-tweeted domain names during CES week — after all, those are the places the tech community goes to find and share information. But it is interesting to see who ranks where. The two most popular domain names on the #CES hashtag are by far the news sites ces.cnet.com and mashable.com. The prevalence of twitter.com, facebook.com and youtube.com, meanwhile, reflects just how much people are sharing information and videos with one another.


Who Are the Overall Leaders?


Microsoft has still wrangled the largest share of the conversation through the week’s first two days, but that appears largely buoyed by its dominance on Day 0, when Ballmer gave the keynote speech at the Seattle tech giant’s final CES appearance. Microsoft’s share of the #CES-tagged conversation dipped from 12% on Monday to just 4% on Tuesday. Samsung, meanwhile, doubled its share of the conversation on Tuesday and people who tweeted about the company had a strong average of nearly 12,000 followers each.

But enough from us. What does all this data tell you? Let us know in the comments.

More About: CES, CES 2012, Simply Measured, Tech, Twitter

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08th Jan 2012

Social Media Guilt Trip: 10 Ways Networks Try to Make You Stay

Deleting your social media account may be the most difficult breakup you’ll ever have. Networks try various techniques to get you to stay, and they often leave you wondering if it’s you and not them. Let’s take a look at some of these clever little tricks that make it hard to delete your social profiles.


1. Twitter: "You don't know what you're missing."





If you choose to ignore your Twitter account, you'll receive an email within a few weeks saying, "We've missed you!" More than that, Twitter lists everything you're missing out on, from the latest news to plain happiness.

Click here to view this gallery.

More About: Facebook, features, linkedin, Social Media, social networking, trending, tumblr, Twitter, YouTube


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20th Dec 2011

Stephen Baldwin to Brother Alec: When Are You Coming Back to Twitter? [VIDEO]



Alec Baldwin, your brother Stephen wants to know when you’re coming back to Twitter.

That was apparently the message Actor Stephen Baldwin texted to big brother Alec after his in-flight Words with Friends-fueled meltdown, which led to the actor walking away from Twitter and hundreds of thousands of followers.

The younger Baldwin shared this tidbit with Mashable as he walked the red carpet at the Mission Impossible 4: Ghost Protocol premiere. Baldwin is not in the movie, so we have no idea why he was there. What we do know is that the actor, author and radio show host is a fan of Mashable. He’s also on Twitter (@StephenBaldwin7) where his verified account has almost 12k followers. Though he has only tweeted 336 or so times, Baldwin told us he likes to tweet about “pop-cultural thoughts and spiritual thoughts. I think it’s a great tool to be able to reach a lot of people in an instant.”

Baldwin seems to be something of a technophile and told us he’s an “iPhone Geek” and is on Facebook. His kids are, too. They’re teens now, but he insists they did not get on the huge social network too early.

As for his brother Alec, Baldwin said that he didn’t tell Alec anything when he dropped out of Twitter, but then offered that he may have texted him, “When you getting back on, man?” That’s what we all want to know, too, Stephen. That’s what we all want to know.

You can see the entire exchange in the video.

More About: alec baldwin, Facebook, iphone, Twitter


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08th Dec 2011

The New Twitter: Everything You Need to Know


Twitter is dead. Long live, Twitter!

The Internet’s most popular microblogging service got a major upgrade today, rolling out a brand-new look and a bunch of new features. The update is the most comprehensive and wide-ranging change Twitter’s ever done, revamping its website, its apps for both iOS and Android, and even its recently acquired social-media integrator, TweetDeck. Here’s a closer look at what Twitter’s done and why.


What’s Different


When you visit the new Twitter, you can quickly see the site’s been reorganized in some key ways. Everything fits into one of four labels:
  • Home: This is your old news feed, only better. Whereas before media in tweets like photos and videos was viewable on the side, now you can see them right in the tweet (you still need to click). You’ll also be able to see information about @replies and retweets for a particular tweet by selecting “Open,” a new option. Twitter says your feed will now appear “consistently” across platforms. which apparently was a problem before.
  • Connect: This is where all your @replies and mentions will be. Not a lot new here, but Twitter says you can type in someone’s handle will let you learn more about the person and connect instantly.
  • Discover: Twitter appears to have supercharged its search functions and put the results here. More than just a place to look for trending topics and hashtags, Discover will identify stories and trends based on your connections, location and language.
  • Me: Here’s your Twitter profile, made bigger, neater and with more activity recorded. Your information now appears on the left instead of right.
  • Twitter’s mobile apps have been given the same four-column treatment, with streamlined interfaces and a new design. In a subtle change, the old pen icon for drafting a new tweet has been replaced with a quill.

    On the back end, Twitter’s updated its API to allow embedded tweets (more on those in a bit) and some better interactions with various other apps and platforms, like WordPress (disclosure: WordPress is Mashable‘s content management system).


    Why Twitter’s Doing It


    Twitter says it wants to make its interface more inviting to new users, while giving existing users better functionality. But there’s no doubt that a large part of the change has to do with accommodating ways to drum up revenue. Twitter has recently been experimenting with ways to point users toward its advertising services, though it’s done so clumsily at times (case in point: the ill-fated “dickbar” on the iPhone, named after Twitter CEO Dick Costolo). The redesign brings with it opportunities to steer users toward sponsors, specifically through the new branded pages (see below).


    What’s Gone


    We’ll have more information on this after we’ve had a chance to give all the new Twitter apps and the site a thorough hands-on, but on iPhone it appears users can no longer copy and paste from a tweet. Users no longer can translate tweets in other languages. Options to mail, repost, or save links to Instapaper appear to have been removed. And the redesign makes it less convenient to switch accounts.

    An important difference on the Web interface: Profile names are now emphasized whereas the user’s “handle” was front and center before.

    (Thanks to Mashable readers for pointing out many of these changes.)


    Embedded Tweets


    If you have a website, you can now embed individual tweets on a page. It’s sort of like Storify, but just one tweet at a time. From the embed, you can retweet, reply or favorite the tweet, and you can follow the user as well — all without leaving the page. Links and other dynamic content remain active.

    You can see the option to embed a tweet on any tweet’s “permalink” page, accessible via the new Open button. Importantly, tweets that are on private accounts won’t give you the option. Twitter told Mashable. For more on embedded tweets, check out our hands on.

    Twitter also improved its buttons that appear on many websites. Now a Tweet button can include a specific hashtag or @mention, an easier way for sites to get their readers tweeting to specific people and about specific things.


    Brand Pages


    Just like Facebook and Google+, Twitter now has brand pages for companies. Although many, if not most, companies already had their own Twitter accounts, brand pages allow for more functionality and interactions with followers.

    A report in Advertising Age says brands will be able to customize the page with large logos and extended taglines. They’ll also be able to promote tweets in the timeline on their own pages, letting them highlight their best content. Brand pages don’t cost anything, and they’re available to companies large and small.


    User Reaction


    According to a poll of Mashable readers, many users (almost 41% of respondents) love the new changes, saying that the site is “easier to use,” “fantastic” and “pretty kewl.” Some have risen concerns about the features missing in iOS and the necessity of the change, however.

    On Twitter itself, the overall response appears to be positive, with many users reacting with enthusiasm. Most of the negative reactions have to do with mobile, with a few also complaining about the usefulness of “Discover.”


    In contrast to some of its earlier moves this year, Twitter appears to have handled its platform-wide revamp deftly, and the majority of is users are pleased. If it can work out some issues on the mobile side, it may have scored a home run. But the real question will be if the new Twitter can actually serve the company in the area that matters most to all companies: making money.

    More About: Advertising, android, iOS, Twitter


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28th Nov 2011

This Is Thriller: What Chilean Students Can Teach the Occupy Movement

Here’s a new tactic for Occupy Wall Street protesters to consider: dressing up as zombies for a mass performance of “Thriller”.

That’s what thousands of members of Chile’s growing student protest movement did in June, gathering for a Michael Jackson-inspired flash mob outside the home of President Sebastian Pinera. Videos of the performance have gone viral in Chile, with multiple YouTube posts gaining tens of thousands of views each.

It’s hardly the first time an international Thriller tribute video has hit YouTube; the most notable was created by prison inmates in the Philippines in 2008. But this may be the first example that was linked to a specific protest.

Chilean students, upset over the fees charged by their country’s largely privatized school system, are leveraging social media in a unique way, according to Katie Manning, a reporter for a group of online newspapers in Chile called Mi Voz.

Chilean students are “pushing beyond the social-networking boundaries established by other global protests,” Manning writes Monday on Wired.

When protesters occupied the Chilean Senate building last month, urging a national vote on education issues, they livestreamed the sit-in via YouTube, as well as a service called TwitCasting.tv, offering a more complete picture than the quick clips typically shown on local television networks.

Students have turned to social media as not just an organizing tool, but a way to tell their stories “without the censorship that occurs in traditional media,” says one activist.

Social media is extremely popular in Chile, according to the research firm comScore. Chilean student protesters have launched an English-only Twitter account to better communicate with reporters, sympathizers and observers around the globe.

While the mass “Thriller” performance may have generated the most buzz so far, even that moment came with some calculated serious undertones, according to one student quoted at the time.

“Public education is dying, so we took this Michael Jackson creation and we united to this movement that is dying, the zombies,” he said. “At its heart, that’s what it is. And behind each zombie, there’s a family. This has much deeper meaning.”

So allegorical zombies going viral on YouTube — that may be a page the Internet-savvy Occupy movement can take from the Chilean students’ playbook.

What do you think about Chile’s use of social media? Is it really much different from that of Occupy protesters and other global movements in Greece, Spain, Libya and elsewhere? And could “Thriller”-themed protests catch on worldwide?

More About: chile, Occupy Wall Street, Social Media, thriller, Twitter, zombies


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27th Nov 2011

HOW TO: Change Your Twitter Handle


This post originally appeared on the American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.

If you’re renaming or rebranding your business (or yourself, for that matter), and consequently need to change your Twitter username, you can do so without losing your followers.

Instead of creating a new Twitter account, head over to the Account tab on Twitter.com. There, you can change your username, as well as your email address and security settings.

You’ll also want to visit the Profile tab to update your picture and bio. In the bio section, it’s wise to let your followers know — for the next few weeks, at least — that you’ve changed your account username, and that you’ll continue to receive all of their @replies and direct messages at your new username.

Financial journalist Vince Veneziani decided to switch the name of his Twitter handle to @GreatestTrades ahead of the launch of his first book, The Greatest Trades of All Time.

Veneziani says he didn’t lose any noticeable number of followers when he changed his name, but it did take “a month or so before everyone officially recognized who I was again in their stream.” Since then, the new handle has helped build sales and name recognition, as well as attract new followers, he says.

Likewise, fashion startup Have to Have was compelled to change its Twitter handle after changing its name from WingTipIt. The young company leveraged several channels, including email, Twitter and Facebook, to alert existing users and the online fashion community at large about its rebranding efforts.

Cofounder Carla Holtze says it was a “tough decision … to move to a brand and a name that better represented our company,” but the feedback has been so overwhelmingly positive that it was worth the pain. “We have far more followers on Twitter than we had before,” she adds.


What to Do If Your Desired Twitter Handle is Taken


Not infrequently, businesses find that someone has already registered the Twitter handle of their company’s name.

If the account is active and the user is not impersonating your brand — even if you hold a trademark on the name — there’s little you can do. If someone is pretending to speak on behalf of your company, you have a few options.

First, you should try to contact the holder of the account in question by sending a tweet or finding a link to his or her contact details in the account bio.

If you’re unable to contact the holder, you can then try to work through Twitter to gain possession of the account.

Twitter says they will suspend an account and notify the account holder “where there is a clear intent to mislead others through the unauthorized use of a trademark.”

If, however, an account appears to be confusing users, “but is not purposefully passing itself off as the brand/company/product,” the account holder will be notified and allowed to keep the account if he or she clears up any potential confusion.

If the account is inactive altogether, Twitter says it “may also release a username for the trademark holder’s active use.”

If you aren’t able to get the name you want, it’s time to get creative. Think of a way to represent your name in more or fewer characters, or add an underscore. Just don’t let the obstacle keep you off Twitter altogether.

More About: features, mashable, Twitter


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20th Oct 2011

Following Brands on Twitter Increases Purchase Intent [STUDY]


People who follow brands on Twitter are more likely to both buy and recommend those brands’ products, according to a recent study of online consumer behavior.

The study, conducted by Constant Contact and research firm Chadwick Martin Bailey, analyzed the behavior of 1,491 consumers ages 18 and older throughout the U.S., and revealed a number of details about how people interact with brands on the world’s beloved 140-character social network.

So, just how powerful is the Twitter connection between consumers and businesses? The study found that 60% of brand followers are more likely to recommend a brand to a friend after following the brand on Twitter, and 50% of brand followers are more likely to buy from that brand.

These findings mirror those from a previous report, detailing how consumers interact with brands on Facebook. The study found that 56% of consumers said they are more likely to recommend a brand to a friend after “Liking” a brand on Facebook, and 51% of consumers said they are more likely to buy a product after doing so. The findings from both studies seem to show that customer loyalty is about the same across both social networks.

Any increase in customer loyalty is great news for brands, especially those lucky enough to make the coveted list of followed companies. According to the study, though, the chances of making that list are slim, as only 21% of Twitter users follow brands on Twitter, and of those, 79% follow fewer than 10 brands.

If your brand makes it to that highly sought-after status, you’re in for the long haul — a whopping 75% of respondents claimed that they had never unfollowed a brand on Twitter. This finding, though, contradicts a previous study, which claimed that 41% of consumers have unfollowed a company on Twitter. The trend seems to favor longevity in both studies, however. If a user opts to follow your brand on Twitter, it’s more likely they’ll continue following, rather than decide to unfollow.

When it comes to a consumer’s decision to follow brands on Twitter, exclusivity and access to promotions reign. Here are the top five reasons given by respondents:

  • 64%: I am a customer of the company
  • 61%: To be the first to know information about the brand
  • 48%: To receive discounts and promotions
  • 36%: To gain access to exclusive content
  • 28%: To receive content/information to retweet and share with others

For the most part, brand interaction on Twitter is still largely a one-way process. While 84% of followers read tweets posted by the brands they follow, only 23% claim to tweet about the brands they follow.

The study also found that Twitter users are frequent Internet users overall — 50% of Twitter users in the study reported going online more than once per hour. Of Facebook users, only 34% of respondents reported going online multiple times per hour. Facebook and Twitter users both outpace the average Internet user, though, as only 29% of overall users that do not have Twitter and Facebook accounts reported logging on many times within an hour.

Twitter users even use Facebook more than users who stick solely to Facebook — 60% of Twitter users use Facebook more than three hours per week, compared with 49% of Facebook users overall.

The study offered one final nugget of wisdom that should inform how brands on Twitter approach their content strategies — 67% of brand followers expect unique content from the brands they follow. So get to it, social media strategists!

See the complete study here:

More About: contributor, features, Marketing, Social Media, Twitter

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09th Oct 2011

A Twitter Client for Budget Shoppers


The Spark of Genius Series highlights a unique feature of startups and is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here.

Name: Tweetalicious

Quick Pitch: A shopping discovery engine built on the Twitter platform

Genius Idea: Although many retailers, brands and consumers share information about discounts and other offers on Twitter, it’s not easy for shoppers to browse these deals in aggregate.

Tweetalicious, a six-person startup out of Pennsylvania, is aiming to address that very problem. The team has released a Twitter client for the web and iPhone devices [iTunes link] that surfaces deals shared on Twitter based on a users’ preferences by category, such as apparel or home, and designer.

Users can give offers a thumbs up to help Tweetalicious better understand what they like, as well as save deals to a wishlist for later perusal. Deals are refreshed every few days to make sure they are up to date and relevant, says CMO Harrison Lee.

The client isn’t robust enough for a heavy Twitter user, but it will serve the needs of casual users primarily interested in shopping, particularly as its algorithms are further refined. The company currently scrapes deals from Twitter and a handful of online retail partners, but is working with mall operators to facilitate offline shopping at the local level as well.

“We don’t just want [Tweetalicious] to be a community of online shoppers,” Lee says. “We also want to reach people who primarily shop within [their own] general vicinity.”

Tweetalicious, which has not yet raised any funding to date, is currently focused on improving its existing product and growing its userbase. Soon, the startup hopes to incorporate deals pulled in from other social networks, including Facebook and LinkedIn, and to add verticals for users with interests outside of shopping.

An Android app is in the pipeline but no launch date has yet been set.


Series Supported by Microsoft BizSpark


Microsoft BizSpark

The Spark of Genius Series highlights a unique feature of startups and is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark, a startup program that gives you three-year access to the latest Microsoft development tools, as well as connecting you to a nationwide network of investors and incubators. There are no upfront costs, so if your business is privately owned, less than three years old, and generates less than U.S.$1 million in annual revenue, you can sign up today.

More About: bizspark, shopping, spark-of-genius, tweetalicious, Twitter

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