Tuesday, July 10, 2012

The ROI of 5000 tweets

Once in a while I need a momentum to reflect on time spent, and to see if it was time spent well.
So there it is: almost 5000 tweets, not much for some, a lot for others.

How did I do on spending my time? And why did I start tweeting in the first place? Have to say, that ROI was not top of mind at first. Experimenting and learning was…
I started in the second half of 2009 wanting to find out if there were any conference and exhibition people out there, people I might know. Had no idea what to expect. Well, there were not many in the Netherlands but as soon as I found out how to search and navigate and who to follow things went their own way.
Investment:
Only time, but lots of it. There is no way I can say that it only took minutes. Evenings spent reading, looking at hashtags, following conversations, looking up links and searching for old and new friends. I did not document the spent time that well but at least an hour every single day might be right. Maybe more. And much more, if you count the time reading blogs and links.
Return:
A network of great people around the globe that are working in the events industry, sharing their ideas and views, giving an insight into their worlds and bringing up topics that are worth discussing in tweetchats or blogs. A world of knowledge that unfolds and presents itself, only if you are willing to participate. Communicate. And share as well.
Learning of events related initiatives, new events, organizers, networks, research, reports, all the trends in the meetings industry on a day-to-day basis. Sometimes by just asking. Often in a tweetchat.
New friends and a better understanding of old ones, finding it easier to start conversations with complete strangers.
Re-connecting in other networks by linking my tweets
The phrase “just do it” for a non sportsperson finally making sense: the start of this blog, encouraged by @jenisefryatt, and the start of a tweetchat for #euventprofs. The results are not always encouraging (last chats were pretty low on people) but the fact that you can just start something and see where it goes was a great revelation. Know what you want and see if it works. Just do it, dare to fail. And that is a pretty big lesson.
So was it worth it?   Personally? Oh yes. Professionally? Oh yes. Ready for my next 5000!

2 comments:

  1. Sanne,

    A wonderful post and something I really relate to. You are a wonderful writer and engager so social media is second nature for you! My advice: don't quit doing the chat. Find new ways to infuse it with energy. Let's have a skype call and brainstorm some ideas for you. European event professionals can really benefit from the #euventprofs chat and from your your example on social media. :)

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    1. Wow,thank you Jenise! Would love to learn from your tweetchat experience :)

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