1. No time for blogging? Micro-blogging is in!
While I post
this article on my blog, an abstract of not more than 140 characters called
tweet is bound to expand its reach. Prof Vaidyanathan, a IIM-B professor, has an
amazing website called www.prof-vaidyanathan.com
but only his presence on Twitter and personal interaction through “Direct
Message” on Twitter led me to it. I share my academic pursuits with him now.
The Indian politician with the maximum number of ‘followers’ on Twitter is Mr.
Narendra Modi with 2.2 million followers, and you would be surprised to know
that he follows me, among 670 others. What caught his attention about me on
Twitter is difficult to ascertain but this proves one point – people care about
your opinion and for the first time, it can reach those who can make a
difference.
People have relied
on diary writing to express themselves from time immemorial, few decades ago people
starting blogging and now it is twitter. In fact I call my Twitter account as
my personal diary – as it chronologically stores my events, news, my views,
views of others that I re-tweet, - for future reference. The only difference is
KISS (Twitter Keeps It Short & Sweet). In fact all of tweets ever tweeted in
the world can be stored on a pen drive!
2. Better
your job perspectives!
Social Media has
been gaining popularity with HR professionals, head hunters – for recruitment
as well as employee engagement. A recent report by SHRM India, titled “Top 20
Indian HR Influencers on Social Media” revealed that the leading force for this
transition is young, emerging workforce that is bold and more social than ever.
The compiled
list includes experts, like Gautam Ghosh, GM, HR, Philips (31 tweets per day),
Abhijit Bhaduri, CLO, Wipro (142 relies per 100 tweets), Anand Pillai,
VP&CLO, Reliance Industries, Vineet Nayar, VC & Joint MD, HCL Tech (440
Retweets per 100 tweets), NS Rajan, Group Chief HR Officer, Tata Sons &
Aadil Bandukwala, Recruitment & Product Consultant, LinkedIn India among
others.
The compiled
list is not limited to HR executives in big companies but also includes those
individuals who are constantly generating ideas and creating and sustaining a
buzz about the industry. There is lot of content dissemination happening on
this platform, thus adding tremendous value for employee analysis, learning and
training.
3.
Knowledge
resource to form your opinion and make it heard!
We have all
heard our grandparents and parents discussing politics in drawing rooms. Today
any type of intelligent discussion is not to be restrained in four walls. News
analysis, discussions, politics and media itself is debated upon on Twitter.
Everyone knows social media played a key role in US elections for Barack Obama.
The viral effect of social media is being harnessed by political parties even
in India by organizing seminars for party workers on to how to conduct themselves
on Social Media and training them to influence the growing number of
influencers.
5-Steps to
get started
1.
Create
Login and password – Easiest steps of them all. You may chose to use your
given name or even create a subject-specific account called “handle” (denoted
by @____ )
2.
Start
following people/handles on the basis of your interest – More the number
you follow more the tweets on your home screen. Avoid following too many to
avoid a deluge that leads to missing tweets from important people. You may of
course, “unfollow” any one you have followed at anytime. Do not restrict
yourself to media houses, journalists, business people, social workers, politicians
can give you views from all quarters, to develop your own opinion.
3.
Every Character Counts – You can get
started by expressing practically anything or by simply replying to another’s
tweet. Restricting it to 140 characters may not come easily but will not be too
difficult as we are all used to the sms language, though try to be lucid. You
can tweet more effectively by:
a)
Using # (hashtag) to create or participate in a
trend, as # defines the common thread lots of people tweet about – making it a
trend.
b)
Using @ (handle) of different people on twitter
to involve others in a conversation.
Remember your tweet is seen on your profile, but will
not appear on another person’s profile till he/she re-tweets
c)
Using photos/links/graphs to prove your point
4.
Know the
slang – Some of the commonly used terminology on twitter is:
a)
RT – Retweet
b)
MT – Modified Tweet
c)
FF – Friday Follows (when you recommend handles
to your followers to follow)
d)
MMS – Dr. Manmohan Singh
e)
DM – Direct Message
f)
IMO – In my opinion
….you will discover lots more as you start.
5.
Avoid
trolling, foul language, disclosing too many personal details while on
Social Media.
Thank you. I was a silent reader of your blog (and will continue to be so) as I find scattered gems in some of your posts. I leave a note on this post in particular, as it finally nudged me to break my recalcitrance and join the social bandwagon. Your reason that a lot of knowledge (useful and effective) is being cultured on the social platform is irrefutable and convincing. I may not be an effective participant to begin with, but I should learn with time.
ReplyDeleteI shall sign up and follow you, in gratitude. Thanks once again!