They should also reach out to prominent online voices early, building relationships with relevant bloggers and
Twitterers just as they would with local officeholders, party activists and journalists.
Not exact matches
Pretty quickly, it seemed that
twitterers were using the site in three primary ways — as a micro-blogging tool («
Just got to work — Mondays suck»), as an online community («@bobdobbs great idea!
True — some people are
just too prolific
Twitterers.
So when you're starting out in online politics, begin with the tools you already use — email if you're an emailer, Facebook posts if you're a social networker, Twitter if you're a
twitterer, online video if you're a YouTube enthusiast, Second Life if you lack a first one (
just kidding).
The most straightforward is to use an «@reply,» in which you reference another
Twitterer in your own post (i.e., «@epolitics why don't you
just shut up about this crap»).
You know, the old lifelong friends share happiness and heartbreak over novels and wine thing is, frankly,
just asking for trouble, at least amongst snarky
Twitterers.
Or is it
just the bloggers and
twitterers going mad to get their early SEO and follower - optimised articles and keywords in?