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The questionable value of a “No Repeat Tweet”

Twitter
It turns out that a good Tweet, like a good song, demands repetition.

So said Guy Kawasaki at the recent Radio Ink Convergence conference.  Guy schedules Tweets to run up to four times.  It's not spam, he argues, when these folks are following you willingly.  And running them at different times on different days maximizes the chance that the message reaches somebody new and minimizes the potential for annoyance.

Now comes this supporting evidence:

Mark Suster at Cloud Ave. weighs in with his experiments in timing Tweets – specifically on the question of how many times is too much. Sometimes he would send a Tweet at 7pm and then again at 7.30am the next morning. "I wanted to see two things: Would the second (or sometimes even third Tweet) convert enough people to my blog to make it worth potentially annoying some people on Twitter? And would I get a reaction from the Twitter community telling me it was too much?" 

His conclusion? If your goal is to send a Tweet that converts to people to a blog post sending more than one Tweet is recommended. "I would assert that people following you by definition are more likely to want to see content from you and therefore you're better off sending 2 versus 1 Tweets."

So do you schedule your tweets?  How many times?

Assuming you have something Tweet-worthy, of course.

5 Comments;
  • http://thejeffbrown.me Jeff Brown

    I do schedule tweets, include new tweets of your content every time you post (also a Fast Company and Wired feed among others).
    I haven’t tried repeating them yet. With the feeds I’m propagating, I’m already tweeting content 15 or so times a day. I worry that much more than that may be too much.
    Only sometimes do I tweet my own content as I want to be as altruistic as I can in the content I share.

  • http://profile.typepad.com/mramsey1 Mark Ramsey

    As Kawasaki said flat out, he’s about “business,” not altruism.
    That said, Guy’s project’s success requires tons of traffic – and repeat traffic – to his site.
    The measure of success for radio is not site traffic per se, otherwise we would be creating Alltop.com instead of station digital assets.

  • http://profile.typepad.com/juliansuchman Juliansuchman

    I follow Guy Kawasaki on twitter, and I must say, I find his repeated tweets annoying. If everyone I followed repeated their tweets, my twitter feed would be a jumble of all the same information rearranged in different orders.
    If you have compelling information to convey, tweet it multiple times, but change it up a bit. Compose different messages that drive the same point, and tweet a different one each time.

  • http://www.breakingthedial.com Nick Kempinski

    I’m with @Juliansuchman on this. A word for word repeat would drive me nuts. But if you give me the same link and a different angle, you might grab my attention with one and not the other.
    Mind you, if I’m always clicking through to the same article, that might drive me bonkers too.

  • http://profile.typepad.com/mramsey1 Mark Ramsey

    Interesting comments.
    Especially coming from an industry famous for…
    …repeats. :-)

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MRM President Mark Ramsey has worked with innumerable television and radio broadcasters over his career, including all the biggest names, from Clear Channel, CBS, Bonneville, Sirius XM...

Mark Ramsey