How to Use Twitter to Quickly & Easily Be Seen As An Expert in Your Field

For years, I’ve been writing about creativity and the writing process to support other writers, but over the last few weeks I’ve been birthing a new writing direction focused on the Law of Attraction. While I’ve occasionally talked about my experience with the Law of Attraction (LOA), it’s not something I’m commonly associated with. So I started brainstorming ways I could build a Law of Attraction online platform to support my new writing direction.

While I’ve had a Law of Attraction blog ready to go for a month, I won’t launch it until I’m sure I have the time I need to post to it on a regular basis.

Since Twitter’s been so important to growing my platform as a writing coach, I started looking at how I can use twitter to help me grow in this new direction, and address a new readership. These are the steps I took:

1. Search user names and bios for keywords

I searched for Law of Attraction and LOA based user names, and bios, to find out who the Law of Attraction leaders are on twitter. To do this I used the “Find People” button on the top right corner of my twitter home page, and TweepSearch.com. I found some powerful Law of Attraction tweeps, including @LOA_Lover who has 73,000 followers. I also checked Twibes.com, but was disappointed with the results. While there’s a writers twibe with over 1,500 writers in it, the largest LOA twibe has only 34 members.

Now, I can not only follow the LOA thought leaders on twitter, I can start to build relationships with them.

2. Search hashtags and tweets for keywords

I searched for Law of Attraction based hashtags and tweets to see who’s talking, how many are talking, and what they’re talking about. What I learned is that there are a lot of people talking about the Law of Attraction on twitter. I discovered that the hashtag #LOA is used 10 times more often than #LawOfAttraction, which makes sense as it's much shorter. I also discovered that when people are tweeting LOA tips, some put “LOA Tip” in their tweet, most simply add #LOA at the end, and no-one uses the hashtag #LOAtip. But the biggest and most important discovery I made was that no-one has started a weekly LOA twitter chat—until now.

Knowing what people tweet about the Law of Attraction means that I can immediately start using the most popular keywords and hashtags, as well as create and promote a few new ones of my own.

3. Claim topic and chat name based user names

I immediately snagged the twitter user name @LOAchat, as well as another LOA based user name, before announcing my new focus and chat. While I will continue to use @WritingSpirit as my main twitter account, since writing about spirituality fits the user name, I’ll use the topic & keyword based user names when appropriate, and will list @WritingSpirit in my bio, and use it as my web link for these new accounts.

Since people use keywords to find people to follow, having a couple Law of Attraction based user names will make me more visible, while also leading people back to my main user name @WritingSpirit.

4. Create a twitter chat

This is the most important step of all, because when you start a twitter chat it automatically positions you as a leader in the subject of the chat. I am now the creator and host of twitter’s live weekly Law of Attraction chat (#LOAchat).

During last week’s #WriteChat I announced that I will be starting #LOAchat on Sunday, February 28th. I scheduled the two chats back-to-back since I’m already committed to showing up every Sunday and chatting with my twitter friends. I’m sending announcement tweets for the new chat from both @WritingSpirit and @LOAchat.

Recently, I was called “a leader in the writing community” by a twitter follower because of #WriteChat, and how much I do to support writers on twitter. As #LOAchat launches and grows, and as I promote it on twitter, my websites, and elsewhere, my name will start being linked with the Law of Attraction in the same way.

* Who are the thought leaders on twitter in your topic or market?
* What keywords and hashtags (#) are used by the people you want to connect with?
* Do you have some topic based user names to stake your twitter claim?
* Can you start a twitter chat about your topic or your market?

Julie Isaac
Founder of the WritingSpirit Book Writers Community at WritingSpirit.com
You can see more posts by me at the WritingSpirit Blog.

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Tags: platform, promotion, social media, twitter

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