“You never get a second chance to make a first impression.” Truer wisdom today than it ever was for business, as a company’s “firsts” can be easily discovered, digitally. For example, Twitter has a “First Tweet” tool that allows users to enter an @username to revisit that account’s first foray into the social platform. It’s interesting to see how well (or not) brands and personalities introduced themselves.
Popular social websites like Buzzfeed and Mashable promote whatever is new, including new arrivals to Twitter. This makes a business’s or individual’s first tweet an event – those 140 characters must be thought through and meticulously crafted. So let’s look back at how some of our favorite brands handled their first tweet and see what we can learn.
The “Fortune” Brand
These Twitter accounts are managed by a team of expert and creative communicators (we hope), ready to jump on the latest social event or hashtag, build brand advocacy at every turn and defend the company’s reputation when needed.
Mildly random. Aimed for maximum character count (139).
Nice to see Oreo got better. #youcanstilldunkinthedark
Happy. Hipster-ish. Explains what to expect.
Random introduction, and the link no longer works. Tsk tsk.
Simple, brief… Grammatical error, unfortunately, in the second sentence. “Check’n” is clever for the big bank, especially as a large business early adopter (2007).
The “Comedian” Brand
Public personalities (particularly comedians) understand their brand and reputation means everything. They’re probably personally generating content – if anything came across as not authentic, it would be called out immediately by their followers.
Yes. It’s Actually Neil Patrick Harris.
All Ellen…
…and this was too good to leave out. (We don’t follow Ellen and didn’t know her handle; this was our first search for it.)
Typical Jimmy Fallon, bashfully dipping his toes in, to test the water.
A+ for Jimmy Kimmel.
The “Parody” Brand
Good parody account writers/runners understand brand as well as trained corporate brand/marketing managers (and have an excellent sense of humor).
#LanguageNerds
This account could be ghost-written by Jesse Eisenberg. It has his cadence.
Sad Paul Giamatti is a consistent, depressed minimalist. It’s brilliant.
Nailed it.
The “Anti-Brand” Brand
This post wouldn’t be complete without an example of the “anti-brand” account. These are run by individuals who launch accounts with one goal: tarnish a company’s image. Their first post(s) need to create a buzz immediately to have an impact… and business needs to pay attention because these posters can be tireless (at least until the event fades into memory).
(If you’re a brand anarchist, remember: quality does matter.)
Try it and share your favorites (good or not-so-good)!