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Neil Patel

5 Ways to Take Advantage of the Google/Twitter Partnership

Here is what we know: Google and Twitter are partners.

Here is what we don’t know: The impact this will have upon search/social marketing.

In 2015, Google and Twitter agreed to a partnership that gives Google access to Twitter’s firehose, which is the term for Twitter’s stream of Tweets.

What is Google going to do with this information? The answer seems obvious. They will provide tweets in the SERPs for real-time search results, which is something we’re already seeing.

Here is some additional information to help you understand the partnership and how you can use it to your advantage:

1. Understand the extent of social search

We might as well begin with the basics.

Social and search are merging. This is no longer pie-in-the-sky conjecture. It is the reality of the here-and-now.

Already, social platforms have robust search algorithms built into them.

Facebook’s innocuous search bar can turn into a powerful social search. An advanced search can produce surprisingly focused results. I can even find friends who aren’t my friends.

Twitter’s own advanced search provides even more flexibility. Twitter search can produce results with positive emotion, negative emotion, or questions.

 

With Google and Twitter’s tighter relationship, we can expect the existing search power of Google applied to Twitter in new and surprising ways.

Social media professionals should understand how search works, both from a social perspective and from a search engine perspective. Having an understanding of search will enable social media strategists to further advance the findability of their brands and specific social media campaigns.

Digital marketing professionals have long struggled with an identity crisis, trying to determine how broad or deep they should be. Those who prefer specialized roles tend to clash with those who are digital marketing jack-of-all-trades. SEOs are told that they aren’t actually SEOs, and marketers and agencies alike are trying to shape up into a T.

Whether you’re a search professional or a social professional, you should realize that the boundaries between the two are blurred. Search professionals should understand how social affects their role. Social professionals should realize the impact of search upon their role.

Both must acknowledge that the lines of the playing field are being redrawn in new and startling ways.

2. Employ an ongoing social strategy

Admittedly, this is a broad application, but it’s one that I must insist on.

Twitter and Google’s partnership sends a clarion call to the digital marketing world: Social matters. Big time.

Brands — from enormous companies to individual personalities — must have a social presence. But social presence isn’t enough.

It’s now necessary to have an ongoing methodology for advancing a social media agenda.

In the early days of the web, a business thought that it was doing a good job simply by having a website. Websites were digital placeholders.

Greater indexation, more pages, more visitors, more leads, more revenue — good things came to those who blogged.

We’re in a similar situation with social. A company that lacks a consistent output of social content isn’t going to last in the world of social.

As Google and Twitter merge their vast user bases and algorithmic technology, we’re going to see the importance of real-time social search results.

Let me be very clear: Tweet regularly. Tweet often. Tweet a lot.

Keep your social output consistent and regular. Presumably, the better your posting velocity, the more likely you are to gain the right kind of attention and traffic.

3. Learn hashtag strategy, and use hashtags regularly

Hashtags will become more important than ever.

It’s likely that hashtags will help to drive search queries and Google’s search results. This is, admittedly, conjecture, but it seems likely that if tweets are part of the search results, then hashtagged terms within those tweets will also be searchable and visible.

It’s not a leap of logic to assume that any hashtagged queries will also produce additional Google results.

How can we be so sure? For one, Google already does this. Hashtagged queries get social results:

The top result for #semrushchat is a Twitter page with that hashtag. SEMRush hosts Twitter chats, so the hashtag #semrushchat has plenty of action, images, and updates.

Hashtags are the new keywords — not just for social activity, but search activity, too.

Since all the major social platforms use hashtags, Google search has been forced to adapt.

Now, your brand must adapt, too. Creating unique hashtags and capitalizing on the use of those hashtags will put you in a strong position to gain additional visibility and exposure s Google rolls out the application of their Twitter partnership.

4. Participate in trending topics

Twitter loves its Trends.

Users love it, too. Twitter trends are a way to discover what’s hot on Twitter. Trends can easily explode into worldwide sensations.

As Google jumps into the game, Trends will become even more significant in its real-time search application.

Google can ascertain what topics are trending, but not with the same instantaneous algorithmically-powered accuracy that Twitter has.

A Googled trending hashtag can’t compete with Twitter’s live stream.

As Twitter and Google continue to cozy up, Trends will be bigger and better than before.

5. Measure, track, and adapt

It will be interesting to see how Google and Twitter partnership will affect the impact and ROI of social media in the future.

In light of the coming change, keep close tabs on your social media record keeping. Be sure to align your social media efforts with your company goals. To this end, it will be helpful to inform your company’s search marketing team of the efforts.

Conclusion

My final recommendation is perhaps the most significant, but also the most obvious.

Keep using Twitter. If Twitter is partnering with the king of search, there is no way that the 14-character social media platform is on the decline.

This is the perfect opportunity to beef up your Twitter profiles, ramp up your tweet velocity, and strengthen your strategy.

Search and social are finally getting together, and it can only mean good things for social media marketing.

What do you think will be the biggest impact of the Google/Twitter partnership?

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