Another Twittertini?

Here’s how to make Twitter both productive and fun:
Treat it like a cocktail party.
If you were going to a cocktail party, you wouldn’t walk in the door and start trying to sell your art to the first person you met. Unless your goals were to a) never get to know anyone interesting, b) never sell art, and c) never get invited to another cocktail party.
Instead, you’d find something you were both interested in and talk about THAT. You’d disclose something about yourself and respond to what the other person said.
That’s the way to Tweet, too.
Last time, I suggested that you look for potential buyers by using the Twitter search box to find shared interests. I used the example of searching for ‘dog owners’ if you paint pet portraits.
So the first things you’d tweet might be about what you love about your own pet. Or the best pet you ever painted. Or the funniest thing that happened to you while painting a pet.
Or what you think about painting pets. Or what you think pets think about while you’re painting them.
Then listen. Read other people’s tweets. Respond–but not with sales pitches. With cocktail party conversation.
Sales happen as a result of creating connections that are genuine and grounded in your interest in your potential collector. It’s all about the relationship first, the sale is the last sip in the glass.
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When it comes to moving your art career into the center of social media buzz, nothing’s better than those 7-days of the smARTist Telesummit 2009!
Written by Ariane Goodwin
Posted under Marketing Your Art
Tags: twitter
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