Twitter – My Favourite Social Media Platform

If you follow me on Twitter, you would know how active I am on there, and how much I am into it. I love the Twitter as a social media platform. I think it is so amazing.

 

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Twitter has proven to be a valuable tool where you can keep up with what’s happening in your niche, get in touch with your fans and reach out to potential clients. But just like other social media platforms you need to be active on Twitter to reap the immense benefits it offers for freelancers and bloggers.

Unlike other social media platforms that have large character limits, what you write on Twitter is restricted to 140 characters. That’s why Twitter is referred to as a micro-blogging platform. All the information shared is brief and straight to the point.

There’s hardly any freelancer or blogger who doesn’t have an account on Twitter. As far as building a client base and fan base is concerned, Twitter has got what it takes to get you connected with the right people who will be interested in working with you and keeping up-to-date with the valuable information you share.

Here’s a rundown on some of the reasons why Twitter is my favourite social media platform.

 

I am in touch with quick firsthand information

To be on top of your game as a freelancer and blogger, you need to make sure that you know what is happening in your niche. Knowing what is happening in my niche keeps me in tune with the current trends, so I don’t miss out on the latest development, tools, practices and ideas.

I also keep up with news and current affairs o Twitter. If I hear of anything newsworthy, I go on Twitter first (rather than a news website) where I can find different links to various websites. With the “Retweet” function in Twitter, I can also share the latest information with my followers.

 

You’re able to easily increase your reach

Thanks to Twitter, hashtags have become very popular with millions of people using different hashtags everyday. With hashtags, information is indexed against relevant hashtags. Using relevant hashtags will help you reach out to more people as there are many people browsing through those hashtags.

Where a hashtag is trending, using the trending hashtag helps to increase the visibility of your tweet. So, when you use a hashtag that your potential client is using, you’re more likely to get in contact with people who will be interested in your products or services.

Twitter also helps draw in more followers for your brand or business. It also makes it really easy for people who have questions to get in touch with you. Thanks to its convenience, it makes it easy for you to send them a quick reply too.

 

You’re able to contact your potential client directly

Although email is an effective way to pitch to potential clients, developing a relationship with them on Twitter helps you to get your pitch considered faster. It creates a form of familiarity that will transform you from being the person pitching your services to someone who genuinely wants to help out.

You need to note that it’s not best to pitch to your target audience directly. Remember this is social media and you’re expected to build relationship with people. So always start off from the point of building solid relationships, rather than bugging them with what you have to offer.

 

Are you as in love with Twitter as I am?

 

 

 

 

 

The Power of Social Media

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You can’t imagine how much social media helped me grow my career as a freelancer. I always found it fascinating how fast information spreads on social media. So many people are connected together through this medium, it is silly not to make the most of as many social media platforms as possible.
Right here, from the comfort of my home, I can be in contact with anyone regardless of where they are in the world. I guess that’s why there are many social media networks springing up year after year. I wonder how many new platforms would be launched or relaunched this time next year. Just look at Snapchat for example, it has been around for a while now but it looks like people just discovered how cool a platform it is, with all the sudden noise I see everywhere about it. I am on Snapchat, but I don’t use it or plan to use it. I can only cope with a few. I only just started using Pinterest, so please follow my pins, lets pin away together. Also, follow me on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook, I am active on all 3.
What’s nice is that I can keep in touch with my audience, my clients, and my friends and family, for free. Well I pay for my WiFi, but communication is a lot easier and cheaper with social media channels, than it was say 15 years ago.

Social media gives my business that needed boost and exposure. I would be lost without it.

Here are some ways freelancers can experience the power of social media –
1.    It Acts as a Platform to Showcase your Skills
When you’re into freelancing or blogging, what’s one thing you need to help your business or blog grow? Clients or readers, as the case may be. The best way to make your potential clients/readers know about you and what you do is by showing off your skills.
Millions of people log in to 1 social media channel daily. Show your unique talent by uploading your work on social media. It can be in form of a well-written article, a video, audio or even a photograph you’ve taken. Whatever form you share your work, social media enables those who view it to assess and appreciate your skills.
Once you put out your best content, it will advertise itself.
2.    It Helps your Work Gain Exposure
This goes hand-in-hand with the first tip. As more people view your work and like what they see, they will begin to share it with their friends. When more people share your work, it gains exposure. It may even go viral and you become a household name in your niche.
3.    It Gives you Opportunities to Network
I have to say that this is one of the most important sides to social media. Social media make it easy for you to get in contact with readers, clients and other freelancers in your niche. You have groups and communities on social media where you can find people in your niche or people looking for what you’ve got to offer.

Developing a good relationship with people in your industry opens new business opportunities in form of partnerships or collaborations. The best part is that you can get to learn from each other’s experiences as well.

I have met so many clients through social media, and many have become regulars. Your network is your net-worth, remember that.

 

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4.    It Helps you Build a Reputation that can be Trusted
Social media gives your target audience access to your life and business. It helps them form a connection with you, know what you are up to and what your freelance business is about or see how you relate outside your blog. As you share value and inspire others with your work, you build confidence in the minds of your clients as someone they can trust for things relating to your industry. Pretty cool, right? This is a great way to retain your present clients and gain new ones.

Social media is very powerful! Make the most of it by being consistent and putting your best work forward every day. Live to inspire others with your kind words and motivation. Give your audience an insight to your world. Most importantly, connect with those who can make you better.

Are you active on all social media platforms? Which are your favourites and why?

Blogging Rules I Live By

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As you all should know, I have been running Fashion and Style Police for over 3 years now, and it has been a bit of a bumpy ride.  I had to lay down some ground rules earlier on in my blogging journey, for my sanity sake and I still blog by those rules.

Here they are:

Remember Why I Started Blogging

I started blogging in 2012 to get busy. I wa spending a ridiculous amount of time online and on social media in particularly, so I decided to get productive and so I did. I set up Fashion and Style Police in October 2012, and I have not looked back ever since. Whenever I had a bad day, I remember why I started blogging and where I was at when I started, and that gets me through even the most difficult days.

More on why I started blogging in my soon to be released book, so look out for updates on Twitter for that.

 

Ignore the Trolls and the Negativity

If you a blogger and you are yet to have anyone disagree with your thoughts, opinion, outfits, posts, body, or your face, then you are not yet a BLOGGER, if you get my drift. Trolls and the internet come together, anyone can be a troll, it could even be someone you know, hiding behind a screen.

The good news about the trolls is that most of them give up and leave you alone, and go off to the next ‘new’ blogger,  when they realise you are not going to feed them. They tend to attack the new bloggers the most, I guess to put them off blogging, or they see them as the weak ones. My trolls really came for me in my first year of blogging, and they said everything possible to put me off my blog, but I didn’t let them. I still do not let them.

The whole blogging/social media ‘thingy’ is still fairly new. Many have no clue how we make money or how much we make, so they hate on us or disregard us. It is human nature to ignore what you do not understand, so I get that, but what I don’t get is the hate and the negativity many non-bloggers/hobby bloggers have towards pro-bloggers, or bloggers that earn some kind of income from their blog.

I just ignore the negative people, who have no idea of how the digital industry works, and I hope they one day understand, but for now, their ignorance is my bliss.

 

Say NO

I have learnt to say no to any collaboration that does not benefit me. So I won’t just hop on a train for a press day in London because a PR said so, I won’t review every product I am asked to review, and I won’t accept every sponsored post request. There is no way I could say yes to all the offers I get anyways, so I take my time and weed out the non-beneficial ones from the beneficial ones, so I don’t waste anyone’s time.

In the early days, I was happy to accept almost anything, but not anymore. The tables have turned, kind of.

 

Enjoy Blogging

I enjoy blogging so much that I see myself doing this for a very long time. I find it relaxing and entertaining, and the fact that it has become a job now makes it even better. However, once I no longer enjoy what I do, I will stop. I won’t like it to be like my previous jobs, lol, but for now, I don’t see myself not loving what I do.

 

Ask for What I Deserve

Gone are the days when I happily took any offer I was offered. I know what I deserve and I go higher than that, to leave room for negotiation, just incase. I won’t write a sponsored post with a million links for $20, just like I won’t write a favourable review just because you want me too. Any review you read on this blog is 100% real, whether I buy the product myself, gifted the products or received a review fee. If the product is soooo bad, and I have nothing good to say about it, I won’t feature it as I won’t want to completely slack the brand. However in my 3 years of blogging, I am yet to come across such a product.

 

What blogging rules do you live by? What do you think of bloggers earning money from their blog?

 

 

 

 

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