Show/Hide
Metrics
Your Influence score -
You are a Twitter superstar.
In your segment, you have a huge number of followers who find what you are saying
interesting. As Spiderman said, "with great power comes great responsibility".
Carry on tweeting and sharing your opinions – people like what you have to say.
If you score goes down though, it is because you are not engaging with your community
but merely broadcasting your opinions – solve this by responding to individuals.
Your Popularity score -
Your popularity
score is excellent but can easily get better. This number is solely based on how
many followers you have. Many Twitter measurement tools purely rank people according
to this metric, however just because someone is popular doesn't mean they are influential.
To increase your popularity you will need to follow more people, post regular and
interesting content, time your posts to peak times, follow trends and add hashtags
to make it easier for people to find your tweets.
Your Engagement score -
Your
engagement score is OK but could be better. You understand that even though influence
is important, to many people how you engage is what counts. You don’t need to be
movie star to score high in this critical category as it is your participation within
niche communities that count. Take more time talking to individuals, make your posts
easier to find by including hashtags and enjoy the conversation.
Your Trust score -
Your
trust score is low because the content that you tweet is either not credible, interesting
or newsworthy. The
Edelman
Trust Barometer
states that 77% of people refused to buy products or services
from a company they distrusted. It is trust that makes someone act – for this reason
alone, having a high trust score is considered by many to be more important than
any other category. Trust can be measured by the number of times someone is happy
to associate what you have said through them – in other words, how often you are
retweeted. To increase your trust score create more posts that will give your followers
a reason to retweet what you have said.