Universities Using Twitter (For What?)
May 28th, 2008 | 1 Comment »
I’ve been using Twitter off and on for about four months now, and have found it a good tool to keep in touch with my peers and writers I like. I don’t use it to keep people updated on every little thing I do (I’m not that narcissistic), but I have found it effective to keep tabs on what people in my circle (and industry) are talking about. Then, when I meet them in person, I have something to talk about. That’s cool.
It’s a nice, personal service and allows for fast-spreading messages.
But is it really a marketing tool? I think not. I hate it when spammers try to “follow you.” They’re fishing for followers. Then again, if you have a ready stream of content to share (@cnnbrk) or you are constantly moving around the country (@BarackObama), it seems to be tailor made for you.
In thinking about Twitter and the Pepperdine community, I’ve had quite a few conversations about using it to reach out to the few Pepperdine alumni who are active on Twitter. Honestly, the numbers probably aren’t there to make it worth anyone’s time. I’m not going to post tweets 10 times a day to reach 10 people. That doesn’t scale.
I found a few links dealing with universities and Twitter; great ideas here and good discussion on the comments. I won’t replicate it. Go check these out:
- Using Twitter for Higher Ed
- Twitter as Alert System?
- Social Survey: Twitter for Higher Ed Marketing (.eduGuru)
- Do You Twitter? (uwebd)
An Experiment
What these links don’t cover is using Twitter simply as an RSS aggregator. Using Twitterfeed, which renders RSS entries into a twitter account’s status updates, I created a Twitter account called PepperdineFeeds.
I set up six RSS feeds to push content to the account: