Archive for the ‘Twitter’ Category

Enterprise Microblogging - Missed Opportunity?

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

Jeremiah Owyang is very well respected as an analyst and has valid, thoughtful commentary on social networking for business. I’ve typically agreed with him enough not to be able to add a lot to his discussions (despite the fact that commenting on his blog might be good for business.) His recent post, List of Enterprise Microblogging Tools: Twitter for the Intranet caused me to think about the value of tools like Yammer versus using Twitter in a more transparent way, or even using Twitters privacy control to keep things closed off. I know some things need to be internal, but I worry that Jeremiah’s post won’t motivate Enterprise organizations to see the opportunity in opening their doors a bit.

Missed Opportunity for Enterprises

Shouldn’t any Enterprise want an opportunity to create searchable discussions about their brand? Isn’t this a great brand marketing and SEO opportunity for the Enterprise? According to Oracle, who just announced the launch of “OraTweet”, their internal microblog platform, that an internal microblog platform “allows us to broadcast messages safely in our own microcosm”. To be clear, ALL businesses have the need for non-public discussions that have nothing to do with marketing.

Missed Opportunity for Twitter

So why hasn’t Twitter added deeper functionality, possibly as a paid option to Enterprises? Maybe the best bet for these organizations is to use one system for internal discussions - and Twitter for discussions that should be accessible to the public. I think there are going to be a number of organizations, and Enterprises, that can use Twitter for internal discussions in a more transparent way and gain marketing/branding value from it. But is this something Twitter cares about? It certainly raises the question about how Twitter plans to monetize.

I’ve long held that Twitter, or even microblogging as a platform has the potential to replace forums, intranets, help desk systems and more. We’ll see if this new wave of Enterprise Microblogging leads organizations to see the broad capabilities of such a platform.

Twitter Tweets about Cherp as of September 10, 2008

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008
cherp: Embrace the niche.
2008-09-08 00:31:21 · Reply · View
harrisfellman: @cherp better tell tiny earl to reserve twitter.com/tinyearl b4 someone grabs it (I would’ve dm’d you but ur not following me yet)
2008-09-07 22:58:00 · Reply · View
BritneyTweets: @BritneyTweets @cherp me too, yet another mysterious Britney Spears performance…Rus.. http://tinyurl.com/5selgd
2008-09-07 22:21:31 · Reply · View
chicandcharming: @cherp me too, yet another mysterious Britney Spears performance…Russell Brand as host is a bit random
2008-09-07 22:13:32 · Reply · View
cherp: Favorite recent start-up: http://www.tinyearl.net/ Brilliant.
2008-09-07 22:03:07 · Reply · View
cherp: Here’s a pretty cool example of what you can do with Twitter: @winmusicwin
2008-09-07 21:52:19 · Reply · View
cherp: Have to admit, I’m a little curious about the VMAs tonight.
2008-09-07 21:34:44 · Reply · View
SethNieman: @cherp We are always working on cool projects at Dewoh!
2008-09-07 01:52:51 · Reply · View
cherp: @jlambert that’s a nice Saturday. ;)
2008-09-06 22:58:24 · Reply · View
cherp: @harrisfellman I buy my Camper shoes from Zappos. But they don’t have AF1 or the vintage Nike running shoes I like.
2008-09-06 22:55:56 · Reply · View
harrisfellman: @cherp u should be buying ur new shoes from @zappos
2008-09-06 21:57:14 · Reply · View
cherp: One of my top 5 fun things on a Saturday: buying new shoes.
2008-09-06 21:21:37 · Reply · View
2008-09-06 18:33:51 · Reply · View
cherp: @sethnieman Any cool new projects you’re working on?
2008-09-06 18:19:04 · Reply · View
benardo: Cherp? A twitter marketing agency. Gotta follow these people to see what happens next: http://cherp.us/index.html and @chirp
2008-09-06 17:40:37 · Reply · View
Frank_Adman: @cherp Greetings and a toast to you: To high balls, high jinks, and case studies!
2008-09-06 17:28:37 · Reply · View
esteveg: @cherp twitting?
2008-09-06 17:13:04 · Reply · View
sultanica: @cherp sleeping or sex
2008-09-06 17:11:58 · Reply · View
cherp: If you weren’t blogging, what would prefer to be doing!?
2008-09-06 17:10:59 · Reply · View
cherp: @Ross You should! Only get Chris Rock, he’s funnier.
2008-09-06 16:57:18 · Reply · View
pkontopoulos: @cherp totally agree with you, more and more I think that it was their initial plan, WOM thru negative comments
2008-09-06 16:51:46 · Reply · View
cherp: @howardgr Sadly Twitter has proven you wrong. The most prolific are rarely profound, yet, highly followed. Lots of static.
2008-09-06 16:50:09 · Reply · View
cherp: I think it’s interesting that this new ad campaign for Microsoft is getting such negative buzz from bloggers.
2008-09-06 16:46:25 · Reply · View
howardgr: @cherp - You don’t have to be profilic - just be profound. Often.
2008-09-06 15:43:39 · Reply · View
cherp: Need to meet the standards of Twitter prolificness.
2008-09-06 15:40:56 · Reply · View
cherp: How does the week start with, "Oh, Friday will be nice and relaxing…" and then Friday ends up being the busiest day?
2008-09-05 23:20:24 · Reply · View
cherp: Sad. I just asked my wife if there would be wi-fi at the HS football game. Because that’s how I roll.
2008-09-05 23:16:19 · Reply · View
tjeffrey: @cherp Pretty funny. Gates is notoriously cheap, which makes it even funnier. No doubt the ads will be good. The product is another story.
2008-09-05 16:39:27 · Reply · View
crosberg: @cherp It’s interesting…but seems more like ad for a TV show than for computers. Not entirely sure how it sells MS…I just wanted cake.
2008-09-05 16:34:56 · Reply · View
cherp: Thoughts about the latest Microsoft ad: http://tinyurl.com/62lgmr
2008-09-05 16:23:56 · Reply · View
cherp: @picard102 That was THE microsoft commercial? Really? Crispin Porter delivered that…
2008-09-05 03:44:04 · Reply · View
cherp: @johncass Thanks! Working on doing some cool things with Twitter. Keep an eye out.
2008-09-05 02:39:49 · Reply · View
cherp: @ricksanchezcnn He’s more effective than the crazy ladies in the pink shirts.
2008-09-05 02:38:44 · Reply · View
johncass: @cherp a twitter creative agency, that’s an interesting concept.
2008-09-05 01:46:28 · Reply · View
cherp: @twittea If your goal is to network with folks: Twitter. http://tinyurl.com/6gtslq
2008-09-04 22:45:19 · Reply · View
WichiTweets: @SheaJ12 Thanks for the tip. I added them. I read about @Cherp, but didn’t dig deep enough to discover they started in Wichita.
2008-09-04 20:40:54 · Reply · View
cherp: @sultanica I could see that if it stays free. Twitter could offer upgrade features. That’s a common paradigm.
2008-09-04 19:50:52 · Reply · View
SheaJ12: Hey @WichiTweets - you might want to follow @cherp since they are the first Twitter marketing agency (& are based right here in Wichita)
2008-09-04 19:44:58 · Reply · View
cabezas: @cherp i agree, its possibilities are endless….
2008-09-04 18:44:14 · Reply · View
sultanica: @cherp interspersed text ads?
2008-09-04 18:44:09 · Reply · View
cherp: Twitter can be bigger than Facebook and Myspace, but only if it learns to entertain a broader audience or make people money.
2008-09-04 18:41:54 · Reply · View
desaraev: @cherp was the excess of social media experts on twitter referring you, was it? Out of curiosity were in the midwest are you located?
2008-09-04 13:45:46 · Reply · View
desaraev: @cherp I know.
2008-09-04 13:43:29 · Reply · View
cherp: @desaraev I was referring to myself.
2008-09-04 13:36:47 · Reply · View
desaraev: cherp: "@armano Creative geek stuck in midwest who didnt want to see twitter get all mucked up by purported "social media experts.""
2008-09-04 13:33:23 · Reply · View
hellochrissmith: "TWitter is growing faster than Facebook, and Myspace is declining." - Cherp
2008-09-04 12:06:18 · Reply · View
SheaJ12: "We’re about to relaunch as the first social media agency to specialize in microsharing." Um, really? I think that would have been @cherp.
2008-09-04 03:57:42 · Reply · View
SheaJ12: I find it highly ironic that a week after @cherp launches, @pistachio is suddenly focusing on Twitter marketing. By ironic, I mean LAME.
2008-09-04 03:56:10 · Reply · View
khw77: @cherp yes Twitter should recommend friends based on Twitter content. Great idea.
2008-09-04 03:05:06 · Reply · View
cherp: Amen @BillBernbach.
2008-09-04 02:18:19 · Reply · View

Twitter Tweets about Cherp as of September 10, 2008

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008
jesseluna: RT: @cherp This is great! Has anyone tweeted the Businessweek Twitter debate yet? http://www.businessweek.com/debateroom/
2008-09-11 02:12:19 · Reply · View
cherp: This is great! Has anyone tweeted the Businessweek Twitter debate yet? http://www.businessweek.com/debateroom/
2008-09-11 01:53:16 · Reply · View
cherp: @jdg That would be great. Imagine the possibilities!
2008-09-10 23:57:56 · Reply · View
tylerstalder: @cherp I just got my iPhone and it’s been great. Mbp has been rocking except for the short battery life. Hope this tweet doesn’t curse me.
2008-09-10 23:47:29 · Reply · View
cherp: @jowyang That’s a great point. I think it’s clutter that makes Myspace ugly. RE: FB, I think it’s just easier to complain.
2008-09-10 23:46:07 · Reply · View
cherp: Hey tweeple! What has Twitter done for you today?
2008-09-10 23:36:22 · Reply · View
pitchengine: @cherp Since I live in the mountains iPhones are no option (we can’t buy em). I went with the LG Dare and the web browsing has been great.
2008-09-10 23:27:42 · Reply · View
cherp: @pitchengine I go back to the Powerbook 2400 and my experience was amazing. This MBP is a POS. And my iPhone’s wonderful-except when it isnt
2008-09-10 23:21:37 · Reply · View
pitchengine: @cherp seriously? - i was thinking of switching to mac, but guess not!
2008-09-10 23:18:40 · Reply · View
cherp: I’m being punished for decades of being a Mac fanboy. My MBP is a total lemon and my iPhone hasn’t worked right since the 2.0 upgrade.
2008-09-10 23:12:15 · Reply · View
Pistachio: @cherp yes, thus "most." some ads are hilarious and awesome. but even among those, do they make buying easier? often, no.
2008-09-10 20:49:13 · Reply · View
cherp: @pistachio I think we hate bad advertising. Look at Apple ads, which are frequently watched online (willingly.) Consider the Superbowl.
2008-09-10 20:18:52 · Reply · View
cherp: @sheaj12 Don’t order the worst thing on the menu and blame the restaurant.
2008-09-10 20:11:56 · Reply · View
cherp: @ricksanchezcnn No apologies. It’s comedy, if its not funny tune out. We used to be a country that found criticism of officials acceptable.
2008-09-10 16:47:25 · Reply · View
cherp: @Armano Loud music, removal of clutter and white walls.
2008-09-10 15:08:03 · Reply · View
cherp: If you aren’t following him already, @jderagon has some great blog posts at http://tinyurl.com/578526
2008-09-10 03:56:48 · Reply · View
morganwitt: @cherp Amazing stuff! Going to buy some of his prints at some point for sure. Thank you for the heads up!
2008-09-10 02:53:11 · Reply · View
cherp: Cherp is headed to San Franciso October 1. Anyone for a meetup?
2008-09-10 01:50:36 · Reply · View
cherp: @tjeffrey Nice work. You’re added to my list! I especially enjoyed the Hank’s logo - simple but interesting.
2008-09-10 01:49:27 · Reply · View
cherp: @StephAgresta From a marketing perspective, the Palin strategy is actually fascinating. I can’t wait for the insider tell-alls.
2008-09-10 01:39:02 · Reply · View
tjeffrey: @cherp How ’bout a salty Charleston, South Carolina designer: http://www.gilshulergraphicdesign.com/
2008-09-10 01:34:04 · Reply · View
cherp: Mark Cuban is responsible for my favorite quote: The greater the risk, the greater the reward. Although, I think someone else said it first.
2008-09-10 01:32:34 · Reply · View
cherp: I want James Jean to do our next t-shirt. http://www.processrecess.com Thoughts?
2008-09-10 01:01:40 · Reply · View
cherp: Talking to an interesting Fortune 500 brand about Twitter.
2008-09-10 00:59:41 · Reply · View
cherp: Dear Apple. Zzzzzzzzzzzzz
2008-09-09 18:52:13 · Reply · View
cherp: Glad Apple passed Walmart as #1 music distributor.
2008-09-09 17:11:28 · Reply · View
harrisfellman: retweet @cherp I’ve gathered some marketer specific Twitter links here: http://tinyurl.com/5tscmy (me: some good stuff in there; tight list)
2008-09-09 14:59:05 · Reply · View
malbiniak: Retweet @cherp: I’ve gathered some marketer specific Twitter links here: http://tinyurl.com/5tscmy
2008-09-09 14:27:14 · Reply · View
OriginalAnalog: RT: @cherp I’ve gathered some marketer specific Twitter links here: http://tinyurl.com/5tscmy
2008-09-09 14:25:54 · Reply · View
cherp: I’ve gathered some marketer specific Twitter links here: http://tinyurl.com/5tscmy
2008-09-09 14:25:20 · Reply · View
cherp: Today should be interesting. Apple doesn’t often have to "encourage" the press to attend. @macrumors will be providing Twitter updates.
2008-09-09 14:10:17 · Reply · View
cherp: @harrisfellman - No, need it to hit iTunes.
2008-09-09 04:08:37 · Reply · View
harrisfellman: @cherp Dunno if U caught Entourage last night-but Johnny Drama & his gf said ‘cherp’ & ‘tweet’ 2 say good bye (drama needs 2 grow some tho)
2008-09-09 04:07:58 · Reply · View
cherp: I’ve had day long anxiety over something that was just put to rest (postitively)! I’m singing and dancing on the inside.
2008-09-08 22:44:17 · Reply · View
cherp: Congrats on the relaunch @pistachio!
2008-09-08 22:28:18 · Reply · View
Pistachio: If your business is ready to try-or revamp-a productive twitter strategy, call us for that too! or talk to @cherp at http://www.cherp.us...
2008-09-08 21:48:42 · Reply · View
cherp: @tylerstalder Yeah, I caught the date thing a little too late. :) Saw the date as 8/8 but didn’t realize it was after midnite. DOH
2008-09-08 18:08:52 · Reply · View
mightymendoza: @danny3stacks check out @cherp
2008-09-08 17:10:42 · Reply · View
cherp: Loving all the Twitter press.
2008-09-08 14:47:17 · Reply · View
cherp: @mightymendoza I’m not criticizing Disney, I think MTV should drop the VMAs and do reality tv awards, since that’s all they air.
2008-09-08 14:46:28 · Reply · View
tylerstalder: @cherp Rumors are that its all iTunes / iPod, I’m hoping for more iphone updates. btw its 9/9
2008-09-08 14:25:30 · Reply · View
crosberg: @cherp We definitely will tomorrow. I’m on pins an needles, honestly.
2008-09-08 14:21:48 · Reply · View
cherp: Anyone think we’ll get a wonderful new surprise from Apple today?
2008-09-08 14:17:14 · Reply · View
cherp: Well it’s official. Listerine cool mint and Redbull, worst taste combination ever.
2008-09-08 14:13:50 · Reply · View
joshchambers: an open source twitter: http://laconi.ca/trac/ and…a marketing firm just for twitter: http://cherp.us/index.html you can’t be serious
2008-09-08 12:40:14 · Reply · View
mightymendoza: @cherp I believe It’s due to the degree of accessibility that these disney artists have allowed for the millions of fans
2008-09-08 05:55:26 · Reply · View
cherp: You know, between High School Musical, Miley Cyrus, and the Jonas Brothers - it seems like Disney is the new MTV.
2008-09-08 05:50:02 · Reply · View
cherp: I take Netvibes for granted, and then I change browsers for a bit and realize how quickly I can get out of touch without it. Go Netvibes!
2008-09-08 05:08:35 · Reply · View
AuctionDirect: @cherp - No…they are just really young.
2008-09-08 01:50:16 · Reply · View
cherp: Hm. Just learned I’m old. Thanks MTV.
2008-09-08 01:38:11 · Reply · View

Twitter Links for Marketers

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

If you are trying to promote your blog, there are already numerous posts about how to use Twitter. But for marketers, Twitter might still be a difficult story to tell (or sell.) One of our first tasks at Cherp was to begin doing research specifically about Twitter to help build the case for our clients and future clients for why Twitter deserves it’s own attention in the marketing strategy. However there are a number of really helpful documents out there to help you define your strategy, sell Twitter/social networking internally or to clients, and probably how to better leverage it yourself.

1. Sapient - Survey…Top 10 Wish List for Agencies of the Future. Great document if you are working on strategy for your agency and you need to know how much energy to put into social networks. #7,8 and 9 are personal favorites of mine.

2. Emarketer - Sign up here to get their email newsletter. Every week there is data related to social network usage or social network advertising spending. It’s very helpful to monitor marketing trends and help with strategy definition.

3. Business Week - Various articles over the last few months have focused on Twitter, but I think the article about “How Companies use Twitter to Bolster Their Brands” is particularly good.

4. Inc Magazine - “Business Uses for Twitter” is a more general look at Twitter use for business, but in my experience when you are trying to make the case articles like this help.

5. New York Times - Brave New World of Digital Intimacy offers an important perspective on this topic and is a must read.

I also recommend Crunchbase for additional statistics about Twitter, although, the most important ones don’t seem to be disclosed anywhere (we’re working on that though, so stay tuned.)

Personification of Brand

Friday, September 5th, 2008
New Blog

Abbey Klaassen at Adage wrote an article titled “Microsoft’s New Spot From Crispin Is an Ad About Nothing (So Far)” and my first response to the new Microsoft spot was similar. I posted this to Twitter immdiately: @cherp “That was THE microsoft commercial? Really? Crispin Porter delivered that…”

I realized today that the new Microsoft spot is the same as what I’ve been recommending to companies about Twitter - in the age of social networking successful marketing is going to be about the personfication of brand. Twitter provides a way for individuals to connect with you, or your brand, in a more personal way. I connect with people daily, read their tweets, gain insight about them, and come to feel like I know them. Despite only being a 50×50 icon and 140 characters, my tweeps are real people to me - even the brands I follow. A machine can send email, you can outsource your call center, but Twitter (for now) requires a real person.

Microsofts new ad campaign, in my opinion is trying to accomplish the same thing. To counter Apple’s “I’m a Mac” ads, Microsoft needed to be human again. Bill Gates IS Microsoft, and as smart as Crispin Porter is they should get Bill Gates on Twitter immediately - joking about his retirement and how he now has time to do things like Twitter. Microsoft needs personification of brand because to many they are just this giant, rich, forceful brand that tried to take over the world (and forced us to use Internet Explorer.) The current Twitter user base is a perfect place for Microsoft and Crispin Porter to look next. With a heavy Mac contingency, and the potential to reach so many bloggers, I hope to see them join the ranks soon.

Watching Bill Gates speak, it’s hard to see him as this modern conqueror of the tech age. For Microsoft, being human means allowing people to develop a personal connection to the brand. Apple seems to have been able to do this from the beginning, for other brands it’s going to take the right advertising and the right action. Twitter is one example of how companies can create a more personal connection through action beyond advertising and it’s a critical component to a personification strategy if the brand wants to achieve long term benefit.

Consider this, while many companies are finally starting to adopt blogs as a way to reach consumers more regularly with their message - are blogs still so controlled and edited that they lose the personal touch that a blog is intended to imbue? I think this is why bloggers keep flocking to Twitter, and why it could be the lynchpin in strategies to personify one’s brand.

Twitter Recommends…

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Part of the magic of Twitter is discovery. Being an open social network, I’m able to find people I would never otherwise be able to connect with and follow them. If I’m lucky, they follow me back - and in that brief moment Twitter makes me feel like a kid who just made a new friend. I’ve met all kinds of great people through Twitter, and the numbers keep adding up.

But here is the thing….

Why don’t you make recommendations?

Seriously, take the advice of Jonathan at WorkHabit and tag tweets, then based on tweet tags give “follow” recommendations. In fact, just liberally borrow from Last.fm because their whole “neighbor” idea is pretty awesome. Sure, I can search for people - but why not encourage connection by having Twitter play matchmaker.

Monetization option: Charge for this feature. Or add it to a sweet of cool features for $3 month. I would probably pay $9 every quarter for Twitter to make friend recommendations and a few other things like alerts (sorry www.tweetbeep.com) and stats.

Thanks for listening.

Matt

Twitter Marketing Statistics from Cherp

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008
New Blog

We’ve been working hard to finish up our first few case studies, and as a part of that we’ve been gathering data on Twitter users that we feel backs up our case for Twitter as a marketing and branding platform.

Part of our research was to do research on 1000 random Twitter users, and measure the following information:

1. How do Twitter users access their Twitter account? (twitter.com, SMS, iPhone App, Blackberry App, other mobile app, blog or browser plugin)
2. % of Twitter users that are openly with a business (must have a URL to a business website in their profile)
3. Was the business user a techie/designer/other
4. % of Twitter users with an active blog linked from their profile
5. % of Twitter users with blog who actively promote the blog (10% of tweets link to blog)
6. % of users who work in social media in some capacity (non blog)
7. What % of Twitter users follow a brand (defined as a Twitter user using a brand name and a not posting for personal reasons)
8. What % of the brands followed were B2C or B2B
9. % of Twitter users employed in the media (TV/RADIO/NEWSPAPER/NON-BLOG WEBSITE)
10. % of Twitter users with at least 25% of their posts made from a mobile device
11. % of users who are actively promoting something versus simply tweeting
12. # of followers
13. # following the Twitter user

Since most of this information isn’t made public by Twitter, we needed to poll a large enough number to gather better statistics on the more than 2M active users.

For example, according to Compete.com Twitter had roughly 2.25M unique visitors (Quantcast has the number of people visiting Twitter at 1.5M.)

This is that magical hockey stick shaped growth that start-ups consider the ultimate sign of success. These numbers may not tell the whole story. The iPhone App Store offers 8 Twitter specific apps, and 2 others that allow users to post to Twitter. This doesn’t include the large number of blog or browser plugins, downloadable applications like Twhirl and sites like FriendFeed. When you consider this with our research which shows only 50% of Twitter users post from www.twitter.com, that number appears to be far greater.

Facebook may have 100M users, but with a closed network users are limited to a smaller segment of that 100M. Twitter’s open network and integration of search (after acquiring Summize a few months ago) means that Twitter offers the potential for much larger personal networks.

Stay tuned this week for more information from our research and the release of our first case study.

Cherp Reaches the Alltop

Monday, September 1st, 2008

What’s amazing is, we’re just getting warmed up!

Alltop, all the top stories

Why Cherp?

Friday, August 29th, 2008
New Blog

As with any new form of media, social networking, (or more broadly social media) has brought a new opportunity to marketers. I think this movement of participant media or consumer generated content like YouTube, podcasting, video podcasting, lifestreaming and others, signals an amazing wave of interaction on the part of consumers. No longer do we sit in front of our TVs or Nintendos while someone else entertains us - consumers have decided to get involved in media, which creates a wonderful but scary opportunity for brands and marketers.

Brands have a tendency to hold very closely that which they value most, their message, and keep consumers at a distance. However, web 2.0 has shown us that technology will no longer hold the consumer back. Twitter was one of those concepts that seemed silly at the beginning but is starting to create a rumble of interest in brands and consumers alike. I jumped on Twitter early, not because I thought it was the next big thing or that I would somehow align my career to it but because I needed something to do with my Blackberry besides work. Here was this powerful little phone/device, but it wasn’t very much fun. I had signed up for Twitter and thought, why not fiddle around with it on my phone. About 10 tweets later I was hooked.

Cherp exists because I believe Twitter can be an amazing communication platform, and I want everyone to use it. Here is an example of why: recently I was able to follow one of my favorite graphic artists/illustrators on Twitter and here his daily musings (or grumblins) - an opportunity I never would have had otherwise. It allows me to communicate about something important, or nothing at all, and it’s this nature which makes me believe that everyone who drives a car, shops, eats, or uses devices of any kind should be on Twitter. It is this unfiltered voice that will allow the world to really know how it’s doing. If you are a blogger, you need to be inspired to write about your experience - good or bad. With Twitter, you just say what comes to mind.

“Mmmm. I love Starbucks.”

“Watching season 4 of Entourage on DVD. Greatest…show…ever…”

“I am never renting a car from Budget again. Crappy car, crappy service, UGH!”

“Sleepy. Goodnight twitter.”

By themselves, these comments are powerless. With search engines, other Twitter users, and brands that listen - this is a direct line to what consumers are thinking and saying about their experiences with brands. It’s not that I like Twitter because it allows brands to send messages to consumers, I like Twitter because it allows brands to hear, and hopefully listen to what the world is saying. Instant, constant market research - provided free by the public at large - brought to you on Twitter.

And if brands are smart, they will respond. In the tweet above about Budget (a message posted to Twitter is a tweet) - what do you think the consumer would do if Budget contact them directly and said, “Sorry. Can we make it up to you?” Simple and direct, and likely to turn an irritated former customer into someone willing to give it another go.

How about Starbucks responding to the tweet above with, “We love you too. Here’s a hat (or a free coffee, or a free music download, or a mug, or whatever they can think of to engage the customer.)” Doesn’t it make it that much easier to spend $6 on a coffee when at least you know they are really listening. Why not look for every opportunity to interact, instead of advertise? Further empower consumers to participate - that’s the ideal goal of every consumer brand - drive interaction on an ongoing basis. It builds trust, passion, and a feeling of connection to a brand that advertising will never buy.

The real magic of Twitter is going to come with creative use of the tool that inspires more people to participate. The tool is just that, a communications tool. But it’s whimsical and powerful at the same time. I started Cherp to excite consumers and brands into using Twitter to engage each other. The idea behind Cherp is to help deliver an ROI to both consumers and brands who participate in Twitter.

Create a Twitter account and follow us! We think it’s going to get interesting.

Cherp Responds!

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Well, we’ve earned some fans and our fair share of haters (which I think makes us official) in the 48 hours since we launched the website. While there were some comments on Twitter to start the ball rolling, credit goes to Chris Brogan who helped create a remarkable amount of buzz. Since many of you have read his blog I won’t restate. While he wasn’t doing backflips, he did ask the question that I expected:

Mind you, I’m wondering just how creative one gets in 140 characters…I’m all for nifty social media projects, but this one has me wondering. You?

Mashable also was quickly engaged by the idea:

Is this something that’s really necessary, or even a viable business idea?

Of course, the real magic is in the comments. We’ve been amazed by the sheer volume of opinions about this idea. Some really get what we’re trying to do, others are at least very interested, and a loud number seem personally offended by Cherp as if we stood them up on prom night.

We are for real, and we realize it’s both bleeding edge to develop a business around Twitter and equally crazy considering the stability issues and API changes. Those two reasons are also largely why we think this will work - why not let us deal with keeping up with new tech and API changes. We’re not unaware of the risks, but like any early stage technology it’s about getting people to use it in sustainable ways that provide benefits for the time investment one makes.

That’s the question we want to help companies answer, and we think it’s going to require some innovative ideas about how to use a technology that has largely been co-opted by bloggers to help build a network of readers for their blog. Twitter has undeniable SEO benefits, a growing number of users (many of whom are influencers in the blog and tech space,) and they haven’t turned it into an ad network (yet.) What this means is there is this untapped, flexible communications tool with interesting potential waiting for people to come up with compelling ways to use it. And here is the thing, not to poke a bunch of rowdy bloggers in the eye, but Twitter isn’t going to reach critical mass serving bloggers alone. It needs to be engaging for consumers, and provide benefits to businesses, or it’s going to just be an SEO tool for bloggers which will eventually die off.

Cherp isn’t just PR 2.0, and we’re not a web design firm. Cherp isn’t a social network - for that we’re using Twitter and we’ve built it right into the navigation. Cherp isn’t trying to sell some “blueprint” that will guarantee you will be a social media rockstar and earn you a bajillion dollars if you join our membership. Cherp isn’t spending a bunch of venture capital.

Cherp IS a company whose sole focus is to use Twitter as a platform to help brands build an engaging bridge to consumers that provides BOTH ongoing benefits, and we want to do it in really interesting ways. So buckle up and keep this in mind, a bigger healthier Twitter means more opportunities for all of us to connect with new people online. Whether that means distribute our latest blog post, get product or brand feedback instantly, listen to consumers, or launch a new business - it’s noble and probably naive, but we see power in Twitter and we want to help people harness it. Our success will help you too.