Due to popular demand, I’m thrilled to announce that I’ve put together a Basic Guide to Networking on Twitter! It’s packed with tips to help you leverage the power of Twitter to grow your professional network and market your organizing business.

When I signed up for Twitter in 2008 on the advice of a colleague, I had no idea how it worked or how to use it. Since then, I’ve spent a fair bit of time reading, attending seminars, and simply observing what other people are doing on Twitter in order to learn what works – and what doesn’t.
I’ve shared many of the strategies I’ve learned in presentations for POC Chapters and local business groups in Southern Ontario, at POC’s National Conference in 2010, and here on Your Organizing Business, but now for the first time, I’ve organized all that information into a concise, easy-to-read e-book.
My Basic Guide to Networking on Twitter walks you through each of these key processes:
Step 1: Create Your Account
Step 2: Set Up Your Profile
Step 3: Decide What to Tweet About
Step 4: Follow People
Step 5: Attract Followers
Step 6: Plan Your Twitter Schedule
Each section includes how-to’s, my personal recommendations, and action steps for you to carry out so you can learn to effectively use Twitter as a marketing tool.
The Guide will be most helpful for readers who would like to use Twitter but aren’t sure how to get started, as well as those who are already on Twitter but are feeling lost or overwhelmed.
Even experienced Twitter users will benefit from the helpful tips and recommended resources!
That’s not all!
You can make money by promoting the Basic Guide to Networking on Twitter on your own blog or website (or anywhere else)! Join our new Affiliate Program today and earn 35% commission on any product currently offered by Organized Assistant, including Organizing Your Life, Your Way.





Great idea! It’s very easy to feel overwhelmed on Twitter, especially for us ‘organizing’ types who feel we need to read everything!
Read The English Organizer’s post: Swap Clothes Clutter for Chic
Trying to read everything is a sure path to overwhelm! Once I started using Twitter regularly, I unsubscribed from most of the newsletters and blogs I’d signed up for. They were always piling up unread and I felt guilty if I just deleted them. Now, I simply scan Twitter when I have a free moment, read whatever catches my attention, and don’t worry about the rest. It’s much less pressure that way, and if I do want to read up on a specific topic, I’ll just do a search on it. (I still subscribe to a few newsletters and blogs that I don’t want to miss.)
Read Janet Barclay’s post: Your Email Address and Your Professional Image