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Audience Development Strategy

How to Promote a Magazine on Twitter

The one thing publishers complain about when it comes to Twitter is that it doesn’t generate a ton of revenue for them.

And the one thing publishers forget to do on Twitter is promote their magazine. D’oh.

Dell is the company most famous for making money on Twitter and may be to blame for the expectations set

Everybody who knows how to promote a magazine most effectively on Twitter uses a combo of wit and recycling

The one thing publishers complain about when it comes to Twitter is that it doesn’t generate a ton of revenue for them.

And the one thing publishers forget to do on Twitter is promote their magazine. D’oh.

Dell is the company most famous for making money on Twitter and may be to blame for the expectations set for anyone looking to drive revenue through the social network. The legend of Dell, who joined in 2009, and by June they had made $3 million through their promotions on Twitter, and by December they had Tweeted their way to $6.5 million, made it to every news outlet.

But Dell sells hundred to thousand dollar electronics and you sell $10-$50 magazine subscriptions. Tomatoes aren’t tomaaahhtoes.

Here’s what Twitter can do for a publisher, and it does it well:

  • Increases traffic to your site through social users (the more you Tweet, the more traffic you get).
  • It sends all the right social signals to search engines, which will boost your SEO results and drive more organic search traffic.

The SEO benefits alone make Twitter worth using. And when you use the 12x12x12 method for every post you publish, it keeps your posts fresh and recycled in the eyes of SEO for up to a year.

Unfortunately that’s where most publishers stop. They spend so much time and effort promoting content that they forget about the promotions.

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How to promote a magazine on Twitter like Dell

What you might not know about Dell, is that since 2009 they’ve evolved into their own version of publishers too. So not only do they have a hold on content with nine different blogs, but they know how to promote it and sell electronics through Twitter.

You’ve got the content part down, and the content promotion, now it’s time to talk about your magazine on Twitter.

Set out to promote your magazine at least once a day. As a publisher, you’re promoting plenty of content throughout the day, so the ratio of one promotional Tweet to eight or ten content Tweets is hugely balanced.

Align your email promotions with your Twitter promotions. If you decide that promoting your magazine once a day is too much (it isn’t, when it comes to Twitter), then go ahead and align it with your email promotions. If you send promotions for your magazine on Tuesdays and Thursdays, then set up Twitter promotions for them as well.

Come up with new ways to promote your magazine. “Subscribe now!” is not the way to get subscribers, but you don’t need to spend all day coming up with new Tweets, either. Keep a spreadsheet where you’ll save the ones you come up with, use UTM codes to track sales, and set up Goals in Google Analytics so you know which Tweets perform best. Social media sales are easily the most poorly tracked sales out there.

How to promote a magazine on Twitter by recycling existing sales copy into promotional Tweets

In order to easily write new promotional Tweets, start with the salesletter for your magazine, and get clipping. Let’s look at the Biblical Archaeology Review sales letter where I’ve highlighted ten sentences right away that could be quickly turned into promotional Tweets for their magazine.

how to promote a magazine

 

  1. The Ancient World Meets the 21st Century: http://bit.ly/1GECZcs
  2. Travel back in time to experience people, places & artifacts of the ancient Biblical world w/o leaving your chair. http://bit.ly/1GECZcs
  3. Relive one of the most exciting archaeological events of the 20th century! Subscribe today: http://bit.ly/1GECZcs
  4. Explore the archaeological evidence supporting the historicity of the Bible: http://bit.ly/1GECZcs
  5. Learn about the claims of the “Biblical minimalists” that the #Bible is worthless as a source of #historyhttp://bit.ly/1GECZcs
  6. We are proud to announce the new Biblical Archaeology Review #iPad#Android and #KindleFire editions http://bit.ly/1GECZcs #bible #history
  7. Save 44% when you go green with our digital subscription to Biblical Archaeology Review! http://bit.ly/1GECZcs #bible #history
  8. Bring the ancient world to the 21st century with the Biblical Archaeology Review digital edition! http://bit.ly/1GECZcs
  9. SAVE 44% off the cover price when you subscribe to the digital edition of Biblical Archaeology Review http://bit.ly/1GECZcs #bible #history
  10. “The next best thing to being there. An indispensable tool for the study of Near Eastern and Biblical Archaeology.” http://bit.ly/1GECZcs

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Or what if you’re Warfare History Network, and you want to promote WWII History Magazine? In only a little more than a paragraph and OFIE, I’ve got five Tweets locked and loaded.

 

  1. The Foremost Authority on The Greatest War in History: http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  2. Start your risk-free subscription to #WWII #History – today! http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  3. You’re a few moments away from discovering the more about the history of the Second #WorldWar that you ever imagined. http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  4. Allow us to introduce you to WWII History Magazine http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7 #historyjunkie #subscribenow
  5. #WWII Magazine is sure to bring you a new and fresh perspective on the Great Conflict. Subscribe now: http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7

Some publishers have much shorter landing pages, and that’s OK too. Think your landing page is too short? Guess again, even The Economist has plenty of content to work with!

 

  1. Two thirds of the world is covered by water. The rest is covered by The Economist. (Subscribe now!) http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  2. Enjoy full access to The Economist – your essential global briefing on #business#finance#economics and … http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  3. The Economist’s vision of the world, style and philosophy are different from other publications. Here’s how:  http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  4. Reason #1 to subscribe:  If it matters in our world, we cover it – and cover it well. http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  5. With brevity, clarity, opinion and wit, we distil what’s important on the global agenda. See for yourself: http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  6. Six million people read us every week, including the world’s leading political and business figures. Join them: http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  7. Time with The Economist is always time well spent. Agree? Subscribe! http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  8. Subscribe to The Economist now for full access – risk free! http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  9. “Life without The Economist would be life without a global perspective.”  – @ericschmidt@googlehttp://bit.ly/1cjO6e7
  10. “The Economist is a great fertilizer for my mind in terms of setting new ideas.” – @jp_courtois@microsoft http://bit.ly/1cjO6e7

Something you’ll notice in all of the above posts is that they don’t say BUY ME!

Because guess what, nobody wants to click on something they know is promotion, before you tell them WHY they should buy.

What they want is for you to tell a story before they click. What can you do for them?

But what you’ll notice is that all we’ve breached so far is how to recycle copy from your sales landing pages to write promotional Tweets for your magazines. There’s more:

  • Mix and match content from the pages, you don’t have to excerpt exactly.
  • Collect the email subject lines with your best open rates and recycle them.
  • Recycle the promotional headlines you use in other ads (PPC, print, etc.).
  • Use images in your Tweets to increase click rates.
  • Use hashtags on your Tweets to be seen by a wider audience, even weeks or months from now.
  • Don’t forget to lead with any sales or discounts when you have them.
  • Come up with new subscription pick up lines and test, test, test!

Do you have more to add? How do you promote your magazine most effectively on Twitter? Share your ideas, methods and results with our readers!

By Amanda MacArthur

Research Director & Managing Editor

Amanda is responsible for all the articles you read on the Mequoda Daily portal and every email newsletter delivered to your inbox from us. She is also our in-house social media expert and would love to chat with you over on @Mequoda. She has worked with Mequoda for almost a decade, helping to evolve the Mequoda Method through research, testing and developing new best practices in digital publishing, editorial strategy, email marketing and audience development. Amanda is a co-author of our four digital publishing handbooks.

Co-authored handbooks:

Contact Amanda:

Contact Amanda via email at amanda (at) mequoda (dot) com, @amaaanda, LinkedIn, and Google+.

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